1. Academic Validation
  2. Blockers of the delayed-rectifier potassium current in pancreatic beta-cells enhance glucose-dependent insulin secretion

Blockers of the delayed-rectifier potassium current in pancreatic beta-cells enhance glucose-dependent insulin secretion

  • Diabetes. 2006 Apr;55(4):1034-42. doi: 10.2337/diabetes.55.04.06.db05-0788.
James Herrington 1 Yun-Ping Zhou Randal M Bugianesi Paula M Dulski Yue Feng Vivien A Warren McHardy M Smith Martin G Kohler Victor M Garsky Manuel Sanchez Michael Wagner Kristin Raphaelli Priya Banerjee Chinweze Ahaghotu Denise Wunderler Birgit T Priest John T Mehl Maria L Garcia Owen B McManus Gregory J Kaczorowski Robert S Slaughter
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Ion Channels, Merck Research Laboratories, RY80N-C31, P.O. Box 2000, Rahway, NJ 07065-0900, USA. [email protected]
Abstract

Delayed-rectifier K+ currents (I(DR)) in pancreatic beta-cells are thought to contribute to action potential repolarization and thereby modulate Insulin secretion. The voltage-gated K+ channel, K(V)2.1, is expressed in beta-cells, and the biophysical characteristics of heterologously expressed channels are similar to those of I(DR) in rodent beta-cells. A novel peptidyl inhibitor of K(V)2.1/K(V)2.2 channels, guangxitoxin (GxTX)-1 (half-maximal concentration approximately 1 nmol/l), has been purified, characterized, and used to probe the contribution of these channels to beta-cell physiology. In mouse beta-cells, GxTX-1 inhibits 90% of I(DR) and, as for K(V)2.1, shifts the voltage dependence of channel activation to more depolarized potentials, a characteristic of gating-modifier Peptides. GxTX-1 broadens the beta-cell action potential, enhances glucose-stimulated intracellular calcium oscillations, and enhances Insulin secretion from mouse pancreatic islets in a glucose-dependent manner. These data point to a mechanism for specific enhancement of glucose-dependent Insulin secretion by applying blockers of the beta-cell I(DR), which may provide advantages over currently used therapies for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

Figures
Products