Gut-expressed gustducin and taste receptors regulate secretion of glucagon-like peptide-1

Hyeung-Jin Jang(National Institutes of Health), Zaza Kokrashvili(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Michael J. Theodorakis(National Institutes of Health), Olga D. Carlson(National Institutes of Health), Byung-Joon Kim(National Institutes of Health), Jie Zhou(National Institutes of Health), Hyeon Ho Kim(National Institutes of Health), X.Z. Shawn Xu(National Institutes of Health), Sic L. Chan(National Institutes of Health), Magdalena Juhaszova(National Institutes of Health), Michel Bernier(National Institutes of Health), B Mosinger(National Institutes of Health), Robert F. Margolskee(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Josephine M. Egan(National Institutes of Health)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 27, 2007
Cited by 978Open Access
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Abstract

Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), released from gut endocrine L cells in response to glucose, regulates appetite, insulin secretion, and gut motility. How glucose given orally, but not systemically, induces GLP-1 secretion is unknown. We show that human duodenal L cells express sweet taste receptors, the taste G protein gustducin, and several other taste transduction elements. Mouse intestinal L cells also express alpha-gustducin. Ingestion of glucose by alpha-gustducin null mice revealed deficiencies in secretion of GLP-1 and the regulation of plasma insulin and glucose. Isolated small bowel and intestinal villi from alpha-gustducin null mice showed markedly defective GLP-1 secretion in response to glucose. The human L cell line NCI-H716 expresses alpha-gustducin, taste receptors, and several other taste signaling elements. GLP-1 release from NCI-H716 cells was promoted by sugars and the noncaloric sweetener sucralose, and blocked by the sweet receptor antagonist lactisole or siRNA for alpha-gustducin. We conclude that L cells of the gut "taste" glucose through the same mechanisms used by taste cells of the tongue. Modulating GLP-1 secretion in gut "taste cells" may provide an important treatment for obesity, diabetes and abnormal gut motility.


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