Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion does not require activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase: impact of adenovirus-mediated overexpression of PDH kinase and PDH …

LI Nicholls, EK Ainscow, GA Rutter - Biochemical and biophysical research …, 2002 - Elsevier
LI Nicholls, EK Ainscow, GA Rutter
Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 2002Elsevier
Glucose-stimulated increases in mitochondrial metabolism are generally thought to be
important for the activation of insulin secretion. Pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) is a key
regulatory enzyme, believed to govern the rate of pyruvate entry into the citrate cycle. We
show here that elevated glucose concentrations (16 or 30 vs 3 mM) cause an increase in
PDH activity in both isolated rat islets, and in a clonal β-cell line (MIN6). However, increases
in PDH activity elicited with either dichloroacetate, or by adenoviral expression of the …
Glucose-stimulated increases in mitochondrial metabolism are generally thought to be important for the activation of insulin secretion. Pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) is a key regulatory enzyme, believed to govern the rate of pyruvate entry into the citrate cycle. We show here that elevated glucose concentrations (16 or 30 vs 3 mM) cause an increase in PDH activity in both isolated rat islets, and in a clonal β-cell line (MIN6). However, increases in PDH activity elicited with either dichloroacetate, or by adenoviral expression of the catalytic subunit of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase, were without effect on glucose-induced increases in mitochondrial pyridine nucleotide levels, or cytosolic ATP concentration, in MIN6 cells, and insulin secretion from isolated rat islets. Similarly, the above parameters were unaffected by blockade of the glucose-induced increase in PDH activity by adenovirus-mediated over-expression of PDH kinase (PDK). Thus, activation of the PDH complex plays an unexpectedly minor role in stimulating glucose metabolism and in triggering insulin release.
Elsevier