[HTML][HTML] Overexpression of hexokinase I but not GLUT1 glucose transporter alters concentration dependence of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in pancreatic beta …

H Ishihara, T Asano, K Tsukuda, H Katagiri… - Journal of Biological …, 1994 - Elsevier
H Ishihara, T Asano, K Tsukuda, H Katagiri, K Inukai, M Anai, M Kikuchi, Y Yazaki…
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1994Elsevier
The recently established pancreatic beta-cell line MIN6 retains the ability to secrete insulin
in response to physiological glucose concentrations. To investigate the role of glucose
transport and phosphorylation in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion by beta-cells, MIN6
cells were stably transfected with a rabbit GLUT1 glucose transporter cDNA or a rat
hexokinase I cDNA cloned in an expression vector. Overexpression of GLUT1 increased 3-O-
methylglucose uptake, but did not alter either glucose utilization or glucose-stimulated …
The recently established pancreatic beta-cell line MIN6 retains the ability to secrete insulin in response to physiological glucose concentrations. To investigate the role of glucose transport and phosphorylation in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion by beta-cells, MIN6 cells were stably transfected with a rabbit GLUT1 glucose transporter cDNA or a rat hexokinase I cDNA cloned in an expression vector. Overexpression of GLUT1 increased 3-O-methylglucose uptake, but did not alter either glucose utilization or glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. In contrast, clones overexpressing hexokinase I exhibited enhanced glucose-stimulated insulin secretion at glucose concentrations below 10 mM with a concomitant increase in glucose utilization. Maximal insulin secretion as well as the maximal rate of glucose utilization were not altered in these clones. Insulin secretion stimulated by 2-ketoisocaproate, a non-glucose secretagogue, was not affected by hexokinase I expression. These results strongly suggest that the glucose phosphorylating step, but not glucose transport step, regulates glucose-stimulated insulin secretion by modulating the glycolytic rate in the beta-cell.
Elsevier