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1 Department of Molecular Medicine and Surgery, Karolinska Institute, Karolinska University Hospital, SE-171 76 Stockholm, Sweden
2 Department of Pharmacology, Hanoi Medical University, Hanoi, Vietnam
3 Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
4 Institute of Material Medica, Hanoi, Vietnam
5 Department of Medicine, Karolinska Institute, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden
(Requests for offprints should be addressed to N K Hoa who is now at Department of Pharmacology, Hanoi Medical University, 1-Ton That Tung, Hanoi, Vietnam; Email: hoa.nguyen.khanh{at}ki.se)
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Glucose-stimulated biphasic insulin secretion involves at least two signaling pathways, the K-ATP channel-dependent and K-ATP channel-independent pathways respectively (Chow et al. 1995, Straub & Sharp 2002). In the former, enhanced glucose metabolism increases the cellular ATP/ADP ratio, which closes K-ATP channels, depolarizes the cell and activates the voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ channels. The activation of L-type Ca2+ channels increases Ca2+entry (Yang & Gillis 2004) and stimulates insulin release (Hellman et al. 1994a,b). The latter involves second messengers such as cyclic AMP (cAMP) and diacylglycerol (DAG) and exerts its stimulatory effect on exocytosis of insulin (Jones et al. 1991, Zawalich & Zawalich 2001, Straub & Sharp 2002, Quynh et al. 2005).
To find novel drugs for treatment of type 2 diabetes, we have investigated anti-diabetic effects of extracts of several traditional medicinal herbs in Vietnam. We found that the extract of Gynostemma pentaphyllum decreased blood glucose levels in mice and rats due to stimulation of insulin release (Norberg et al. 2004). The compound responsible for this effect, phanoside, was further purified, and its structure was characterized (Norberg et al. 2004). In the present study, we aimed at elucidating the mechanisms of phanoside-induced insulin secretion.
| Materials and Methods |
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Normal Wistar (W) rats were purchased from a commercial breeder (B&K Universal, Sollentuna, Stockholm Sweden). Diabetic Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rats, originating from W rats, were bred in our department (Ostenson et al. 1993). The animals were kept in room temperature (22 °C) with food and water and allowed to feed ad libitum before being killed to get pancreas for isolation of islets. A lightdarkness cycle (0600 and 1800 h) was strictly enforced. The rats were fed a chow with 18.5% raw protein, 4.0% fat, and 55.7% carbohydrates, with energy content of 1260 kJ/100 g. The study was approved by the animal research ethics committee of the Karolinska Institute.
Collagenase for isolation of islets was purchased from Roche Diagnostic (Stockholm, Sweden), calphostin-C and H89 were from Calbiochem (Stockholm, Sweden), diazoxide, forskolin, carbachol and other chemicals were from Sigma Aldrich (Stockholm, Sweden). Phanoside was purified from G. pentaphyllum following the method described previously (Norberg et al. 2004).
Isolation of pancreatic islets
The experiments were performed with islets isolated by collagenase digestion of the pancreas of male Wistar and GK rats (280320 g; Lacy & Kostianovsky 1967). After isolation, the islets were cultured for 24 h in RPMI 1640 medium (Flow lab Ltd), containing 11 mM glucose, 10% heat inactivated fetal calf serum, 100 IU/ml penicillin, and 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin (Ostenson et al. 1993).
Batch incubations
The medium used for islet incubations was KrebsRinger bicarbonate (KRB) buffer solution containing 118.4 mM NaCl, 4.7 mM KCl, 1.9 mM CaCl2, 1.2 mM MgSO4, 1.2 mM KH2PO4 and 25 mM NaHCO3 (equilibrated with 5% CO295% O2, pH 7.4) and 0.2% BSA, 10 mM HEPES, and 3.3 or 16.7 mM glucose. Insulin release was assessed in batch incubations of islets following preincubation for 30 min at 3.3 mM glucose. Batches of three islets were incubated for 60 min in KRB with 3.3 or 16.7 mM glucose, and phanoside (150 µM, which was found previously to be a stimulating concentration).
To investigate whether phanoside exerts direct effect on insulin exocytosis, islets were incubated in KRB with 50 mM KCl to depolarize the B-cells, 0.25 mM diazoxide to keep the K-ATP channels open (Sato et al. 1999) or just 0.25 mM diazoxide with or without phanoside.
To evaluate the effect of protein kinase A (PKA) and protein kinase C (PKC) on phanoside-induced insulin release, normal W rat islets were incubated with phanoside and the PKA-inhibitor, H89 (10 µM; Filipsson & Ahren 1998) or the PKC inhibitor, calphostin-C (1.5 µM; Thams & Capito 2001) for 60 min in KRB containing 3.3 or 16.7 mM glucose with or without phanoside. The inhibition of PKA and PKC by each appropriate inhibitor was also studied in islets incubated in the presence of forskolin or carbachol respectively.
To evaluate the effect of pertussis toxin on phanoside-induced insulin release, normal W rat islets were pretreated for 24 h at 37 °C in RPMI-1640 culture medium containing 11 mM glucose, 10% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum, 100 ng/ml pertussis toxin, 100 IU/ml penicillin, and 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin.
Perifusion of islets
Perifusion of islets was used to investigate how phanoside affects the kinetics of insulin release. Batches of 30 isolated W rat islets were perifused for 20 min (20 to min 0) with medium containing 3.3 mM glucose. Perifusion medium was collected in fractions every 2 min to establish the basal insulin secretion rate at 3.3 mM glucose. From min 0 to 20, the glucose concentration was increased to 16.7 mM glucose and then decreased to 3.3 mM. Phanoside (75 or 150 µM) together with 16.7 mM was added from min 0 to 20.
Insulin RIA
After batch incubations or perifusions, aliquots of the medium were analyzed for insulin content by RIA (Herbert et al. 1965). The sensitivity of the RIA was 3.9 mU/l, the interassay coefficient of variation was <3.8% and the intra-assay coefficient of variation was <3.1%.
Cell viability assays
Trypan blue assay After incubation in the absence (control group) or presence of phanoside 150 µM, islet cells prepared as described previously (Pipeleers & Pipeleers-Marichal 1981) were exposed to the membrane-impermeant dye, trypan blue (0.1% w/v) for 15 min at 37 °C. The presence of dye was determined by light microscopy and the numbers of unstained and stained cells in the field were counted to obtain an estimate of the percentage of the cells taking up the dye (Persaud et al. 1999).
Measurement of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release Batches of 100 pancreatic islets were incubated for 60 min with phanoside (150 µM). LDH release from islets was measured by determining LDH activity (cytotoxicity detection kit-LDH, Roche Applied Science). The amount of color formed in the assay is proportional to the number of lysed islet cells. The LDH activity in the total of dead islet cells (high control) was measured after solubilization of islet cells with 5% (v/v) Triton X-100 (Lash et al. 2001). To determine the percentage cytotoxicity, the absorbance at 490 nm was measured in duplicate samples with subtraction of values obtained in control incubation (low control with islets but without phanoside), using the following equation:
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Statistical analysis
The results have been calculated as means±S.E.M. and comparisons of the data have been done by ANOVA test with Bonferroni correction for multiple testing.
| Results |
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Glucose (16.7 mM) stimulated insulin release, relative to the release at 3.3 mM, in W rat islets but not in GK rat islets (Fig. 1
). In W rat islets, phanoside (150 µM) stimulated insulin secretion from 4.3±0.9 to 32.0±3.9 µU/islet per h at 3.3 mM glucose and from 15.2±4.0 to 57.7±8.7 µU/islet per h at 16.7 mM glucose (P<0.001 for both; Fig. 1
). In GK rat islets, at 3.3 mM glucose, phanoside (150 µM) stimulated insulin secretion islets from 10.2±3.6 to 29.5± 5.1 µU/islet per h (P<0.001; Fig. 1
). At 16.7 mM glucose, phanoside (150 µM) also augmented insulin secretion from 12.1±4.8 to 37.3±7.5 µU/islet per h (P<0.001).
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Glucose (16.7 mM) induced a biphasic insulin secretion from the perifused islets (Fig. 2
). When glucose was decreased to 3.3 mM, insulin release gradually returned to basal levels. Addition of 150 or 75 µM phanoside to 16.7 mM glucose markedly enhanced insulin secretion from the perifused islets when compared with that of islets perifused only with 16.7 mM glucose, and the effect of phanoside was dose-dependent. When phanoside was omitted from the perifusate, the insulin secretion decreased to basal levels (Fig. 2
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At 3.3 mM glucose, diazoxide (0.25 mM) did not affect basal insulin release or insulin response to phanoside (Table 1
). At 16.7 mM glucose, diazoxide abolished the glucose-induced insulin release, and decreased insulin response to phanoside by almost 50% (P<0.01).
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At 3.3 and 16.7 mM glucose, depolarization of W rat islet B-cells by exposure to 50 mM KCl+0.25 mM diazoxide increased insulin release 6.9- and 6.1-fold respectively (P<0.001 for both; Table 1
). When islets were incubated at 3.3 mM glucose with 50 mM KCl, 0.25 mM diazoxide and 150 µM phanoside, insulin secretion was 2.0-fold higher than when islets were incubated in 150 µM phanoside alone (P<0.001) and 2.3-fold higher than when islets were incubated in 50 mM KCl+0.25 mM diazoxide (P<0.001; Table 1
). At 16.7 mM glucose, however, the insulin response to 50 mM KCl, 0.25 mM diazoxide and 150 µM phanoside was higher than to 150 µM phanoside (P<0.001) but not significantly different than to 50 mM KCl+0.25 mM diazoxide. Also at 27 mM glucose, the insulin response at depolarizing conditions was within a similar range (112.5± 14.1 µU/islet per h).
Effect of nimodipine on phanoside-induced insulin secretion from isolated W rat islets
When using nimodipine to block L-type Ca2+ channels in membrane of B-cell, the phanoside-induced insulin secretion of islets was not affected at 3.3 mM glucose (Table 2
). However, at 16.7 mM glucose, insulin secretion was decreased by nimodipine from 16.0±0.8 to 3.8±1.0 µU/islet per h (P<0.001). In addition, nimodipine decreased phanoside-induced insulin release from 58.5±8.0 to 34.2± 3.7 µU/islet per h (P<0.01; Table 2
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When W rat islets were incubated, at 3.3 and 16.7 mM glucose, with phanoside plus the PKA inhibitor, H89, or the PKC inhibitor, calphostin-C, there were no differences in insulin secretion compared with the release from islets incubated with phanoside alone (Table 3
). However, H89 and calphostin-C, although not suppressing the insulin response to 16.7 mM glucose, inhibited insulin secretion elicited by forskolin and carbachol respectively (Table 3
).
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Without pretreatment of islets with pertussis toxin, 150 µM phanoside stimulated release of insulin in W rat islets from 3.6±0.3 µU/islet per h in the control group to 31.1± 3.9 µU/islet per h (P<0.001) at 3.3 mM glucose and from 16.2±0.8 to 71.4±6.5 µU/islet per h (P<0.001) at 16.7 mM glucose (Fig. 3
). When islets were pretreated with pertussis toxin, insulin response to 3.3 mM glucose was similar but the response to 16.7 mM glucose was greatly increased to 61.6±3.0 µU/islet/h/islet/h. The insulin responses to 150 µM phanoside were 25.5±2.1 µU/islet per h at 3.3 mM glucose (P<0.001) and 63.9±6.9 µU/islet per h at 16.7 mM glucose (Fig. 3
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Exposure of islet cells to phanoside for 60 min did not significantly affect the number of cells to which trypan blue dye gained access, with 9.6±1.7% of the cells taking up the dye at 150 µM phanoside and 6.2±1.0% in the control group (P=0.0878, n=11). According to the measurements of LDH release from islets, the percentage of dead islet cells after 60-min incubation with 150 µM phanoside was 8.7±1.3%.
| Discussion |
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Phanoside is a gypenoside, related to saponins that may be cytotoxic (Persaud et al. 1999). Previously, the herbal extract of Gymnema sylvestre, containing several saponins or surfactants, was shown to induce insulin release from rat islets and several pancreatic B-cell lines by increased membrane permeability (Persaud et al.1999). The number of cells to which trypan blue dye gained access was 98% of MIN6 cells, 95% of RINm5F cells, and 88% of HIT-T15 at 0.25 mg/ml GS4 a compound extracted from G. sylvestre that stimulated insulin secretion. Thus, a similar mechanism could explain phanoside-induced insulin release. However, several observations speak against such an explanation and rather favor a specific effect of phanoside on the B-cell secretion. First of all, phanoside at concentrations used in islet incubations only slightly increased the release of LDH from islets exposed to the compound for 60 min (<10%) and did not increase uptake of trypan blue. Secondly, in the perifusion experiments, insulin secretion returned to basal levels when phanoside was omitted from the perifusate, indicating that exposure to the compound did not cause leakage of insulin from the islets. Finally, if there was a cytotoxic effect by phanoside inducing insulin leakage, it is not likely that the insulin secretion of islets incubated with phanoside could have been blocked by nimodipine, or diazoxide at high glucose concentration.
When exploring the mechanism of phanoside-induced insulin release, we first considered the K-ATP channel-dependent mechanism for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. A rise in circulating glucose concentration increases intracellular ATP and decreases intracellular ADP, thereby closing ATP-sensitive K+ (K-ATP) channels in the B-cells. This results in membrane depolarization, opening of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels and a rise in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), which triggers insulin secretion. (Straub & Sharp 2002, MacDonald & Wheeler 2003). When the K-ATP channels are kept open by diazoxide, glucose-induced insulin secretion is decreased (Trube et al. 1986). Phanoside stimulated insulin secretion at both 3.3 and 16.7 mM glucose, but in the presence of diazoxide the insulin response to phanoside was decreased at 16.7 mM, but not at all at 3.3 mM glucose. Thus, the effect of phanoside did not seem to involve the closure of B-cell K-ATP channels. In the presence of a high concentration of K+ and diazoxide, the B-cells are depolarized, leading to increased cytosolic Ca2+ concentration and insulin release (Quynh et al. 2005). At 3.3 mM glucose, phanoside stimulated insulin secretion from depolarized islets suggesting that the effect of phanoside resides in the distal part of the B-cell stimulus-secretion coupling for glucose, i.e in the exocytotic machinery. However, at 16.7 mM glucose, phanoside did not further enhance insulin secretion from depolarized islets, suggesting that islets have a near-maximal exocytosis of insulin under the conditions.
L-type Ca2+ channels play an important role in insulin secretion. By using nimodipine, an L-type Ca2+ channel blocker, the Ca2+channels will be closed and thus the insulin secretion due to influx of Ca2+ from outside the cell is blocked (Keahey et al. 1989, Hellman et al. 1994b, Chow et al. 1995, Straub & Sharp 2002). In our experiments, phanoside-induced insulin secretion in the presence of nimodipine at 3.3 mM glucose was not blocked, indicating that the effect of phanoside does not involve L-type Ca2+ channels. At 16.7 mM glucose, the insulin secretion of islets incubated with nimodipine plus phanoside was lower than that of the islets incubated with phanoside alone, but still higher than that of the islets incubated with 16.7 mM glucose. Thus, it is likely that nimodipine blocks glucose-induced insulin secretion but does not affect the phanoside effect.
An increase in intracellular Ca2+ in the B-cell in response to insulin secretagogs, including glucose, directly triggers exocytosis of the insulin granules (Hellman et al. 1994a). Second messengers, such as cAMP and DAG, increase insulin release through protein phosphorylation events mediated by PKA (Thams et al. 2005) and PKC respectively (Jones et al. 1991). Using the PKA inhibitor, H89 (Thams et al. 2005) and the PKC inhibitor, calphostin C (Thams & Capito 2001), it was not possible to block the insulin-stimulating effect of phanoside. This indicates that phanoside does not exert its effect on B-cells involving the PKA or PKC systems.
GTP-binding proteins (G-proteins) play functional roles in the process of signal transduction for hormone release (Robertson et al. 1991). Some G-proteins are inhibited by pertussis toxin such as Gi (the protein that mediates inhibition of adenylcyclase) and Ge (which is directly coupled with exocytosis; Sontag et al. 1991, Komatsu et al. 1993). In the pancreatic B-cell, Ge-proteins have been functionally linked to insulin exocytosis (Komatsu et al. 1993). In our study, pre-treatment of islets with pertussis toxin increased glucose-induced insulin secretion. This effect can be explained by the fact that pertussis toxin treatment of islets reverses the inhibition of insulin secretion by e.g. epinephrine and somatostatin via Gi-protein. Phanoside-induced insulin secretion was not suppressed by pertussis toxin; thus, the mechanism by which phanoside modulates insulin secretion seems not to involve exocytotic Ge-proteins. An alternative explanation would be that phanoside, similar to pertussis toxin, suppresses Gi-proteins and thereby induces enhanced secretion of insulin.
In conclusion, phanoside stimulated insulin secretion from W and GK rat islets. This effect seems to be exerted distal to K-ATP channels and L-type Ca2+ channels, which is on the exocytotic machinery of the B-cells. Thereby, the mechanism behind phanosides effect on the B-cells differs from that of sulfonylurea that acts by closing the K-ATP channels (Sturgess et al. 1985). However, similar to sulfonylureas, the effect of phanoside is not glucose-dependent.
| Acknowledgements |
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Received in final form 16 November 2006
Accepted 17 November 2006
Made available online as an Accepted Preprint 11 December 2006
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