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Intracellular diadenosine polyphosphates: a novel second messenger in stimulus-secretion coupling
Authors:F Martín  J Pintor  JM Rovira  C Ripoll  MT Miras-Portugal  B Soria
Affiliation:Department of Science and Technology and Institute of Bioengineering, Campus de San Juan, Miguel Hernandez University, Alicante, Spain.
Abstract:In pancreatic beta-cells, stimulatory glucose concentrations increase cytosolic diadenosine polyphosphates (ApnA]i) to concentrations sufficient to block ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels. High-performance liquid chromatography and patch clamp techniques were used to study the metabolic pathways by which pancreatic beta-cells synthesize ApnA and the mechanism through which ApnA inhibit KATP channels. ApnA show a glucose- and time-dependent cytosolic concentration increase parallel, though 30- to 50-fold higher, to changes observed in adenine nucleotides. Other fuel secretagogues, leucine and 2-ketoisocaproate, raise ApnA]i as efficiently as 22 mM glucose. Blockade of glycolysis or Krebs cycle decreases glucose-induced ApnA]i. No significant increase in cytosolic ApnA concentrations is induced by nonnutrient secretagogues or nonmetabolizable nutrient secretagogues. Inorganic pyrophosphatase inhibition with sodium fluoride blocks 22 mM glucose-induced ApnA]i increase. ApnA inhibition of KATP channel resembles that of ATP in efficacy, but shows clear functional differences. Unlike ATP, Ap4A does not restore channel activity after rundown. Furthermore, these compounds do not compete with each other for the same site. These features suggest a prominent role for Ap4A in beta-cell function, comparable to ATP. We conclude that nutrient metabolism through pyrophosphatase activation is necessary to induce ApnA synthesis, which in turn constitutes a new, ATP-independent, metabolic regulator of KATP channel activity.
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