Arsenite and its trivalent methylated metabolites inhibit glucose-stimulated calcium influx and insulin secretion in murine pancreatic islets

被引:0
作者
Madelyn Huang
Christelle Douillet
Miroslav Stýblo
机构
[1] University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,Curriculum in Toxicology and Environmental Medicine, School of Medicine
[2] National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences,National Toxicology Program
[3] University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,Department of Nutrition, CB# 7461, Gillings School of Global Public Health
来源
Archives of Toxicology | 2019年 / 93卷
关键词
Arsenic; Pancreatic islets; Calcium influx; Mechanism; Diabetes;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Chronic exposure to inorganic arsenic (iAs), a common drinking water and food contaminant, has been associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes in population studies worldwide. Several mechanisms underlying the diabetogenic effects of iAs have been proposed through laboratory investigations. We have previously shown that exposure to arsenite (iAs(III)) or its methylated trivalent metabolites, methylarsonite (MAs(III)) and dimethylarsinite (DMAs(III)), inhibits glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) in pancreatic islets, without significant effects on insulin expression or insulin content. The goal of the present study was to determine if iAs(III) and/or its metabolites inhibit Ca2+ influx, an essential mechanism that regulates the release of insulin from β cells in response to glucose. We found that in vitro exposures for 48 h to non-cytotoxic concentrations of iAs(III), MAs(III), and DMAs(III) impaired Ca2+ influx in isolated murine pancreatic islets stimulated with glucose. MAs(III) and DMAs(III) were more potent inhibitors of Ca2+ influx than iAs(III). These arsenicals also inhibited Ca2+ influx and GSIS in islets treated with depolarizing levels of potassium chloride in the absence of glucose. Treatment with Bay K8644, a Cav1.2 channel agonist, did not restore insulin secretion in arsenical-exposed islets. Tolbutamide, a KATP channel blocker, prevented inhibition of insulin secretion in MAs(III)- and DMAs(III)-exposed islets, but only marginally in islets exposed to iAs(III). Our findings suggest that iAs(III), MAs(III), and DMAs(III) inhibit glucose-stimulated Ca2+ influx in pancreatic islets, possibly by interfering with KATP and/or Cav1.2 channel function. Notably, the mechanisms underlying inhibition of GSIS by iAs(III) may differ from those of its trivalent methylated metabolites.
引用
收藏
页码:2525 / 2533
页数:8
相关论文
共 209 条
  • [1] Ashfield R(1999)Identification of the high-affinity tolbutamide site on the SUR1 subunit of the KATP channel Diabetes 48 1341-1347
  • [2] Gribble FM(2001)Functional and physical coupling of voltage-sensitive calcium channels with exocytotic proteins: ramifications for the secretion mechanism J Neurochem 77 972-985
  • [3] Ashcroft SJ(1999)The tolbutamide site of SUR1 and a mechanism for its functional coupling to K FEBS Lett 459 367-376
  • [4] Ashcroft FM(1999) channel closure Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 96 5539-5544
  • [5] Atlas D(2001)The stimulatory action of tolbutamide on Ca Biophys J 81 3308-3323
  • [6] Babenko AP(2009)-dependent exocytosis in pancreatic beta cells is mediated by a 65-kDa mdr-like P-glycoprotein J Cell Biol 184 923-933
  • [7] Gonzalez G(2012)Fast exocytosis with few Ca( Nat Rev Endocrinol 8 228-236
  • [8] Bryan J(2012)) channels in insulin-secreting mouse pancreatic B cells Pancreas 41 15-21
  • [9] Barg S(2014)Akt regulates L-type Ca J Biol Chem 289 12435-12445
  • [10] Renström E(2011) channel activity by modulating CaValpha1 protein stability Environ Health 10 73-299