Adenosine Diphosphate as an Intracellular Regulator of Insulin Secretion

Colin G. Nichols(Washington University in St. Louis), Show‐Ling Shyng(Washington University in St. Louis), Ann Nestorowicz(Washington University in St. Louis), Benjamin Gläser(Hadassah Medical Center), Jérémy Clément(Baylor College of Medicine), Gabriela González(Baylor College of Medicine), Lydia Aguilar‐Bryan(Baylor College of Medicine), M. Alan Permutt(Washington University in St. Louis), Joseph Bryan(Baylor College of Medicine)
Science
June 21, 1996
Cited by 534

Abstract

Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels couple the cellular metabolic state to electrical activity and are a critical link between blood glucose concentration and pancreatic insulin secretion. A mutation in the second nucleotide-binding fold (NBF2) of the sulfonylurea receptor (SUR) of an individual diagnosed with persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy generated KATP channels that could be opened by diazoxide but not in response to metabolic inhibition. The hamster SUR, containing the analogous mutation, had normal ATP sensitivity, but unlike wild-type channels, inhibition by ATP was not antagonized by adenosine diphosphate (ADP). Additional mutations in NBF2 resulted in the same phenotype, whereas an equivalent mutation in NBF1 showed normal sensitivity to MgADP. Thus, by binding to SUR NBF2 and antagonizing ATP inhibition of KATP++ channels, intracellular MgADP may regulate insulin secretion.


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