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Molecular or pharmacologic perturbation of the link between glucose and lipid metabolism is without effect on glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. A re-evaluation of the long-chain acyl-CoA hypothesis.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Antinozzi, PA; Segall, L; Prentki, M; McGarry, JD; Newgard, CB
Published in: J Biol Chem
June 26, 1998

The mechanism by which glucose stimulates insulin secretion from the pancreatic islets of Langerhans is incompletely understood. It has been suggested that malonyl-CoA plays a regulatory role by inhibiting fatty acid oxidation and promoting accumulation of cytosolic long-chain acyl-CoA (LC-CoA). In the current study, we have re-evaluated this "long-chain acyl-CoA hypothesis" by using molecular and pharmacologic methods to perturb lipid metabolism in INS-1 insulinoma cells or rat islets during glucose stimulation. First, we constructed a recombinant adenovirus containing the cDNA encoding malonyl-CoA decarboxylase (AdCMV-MCD), an enzyme that decarboxylates malonyl-CoA to acetyl-CoA. INS-1 cells treated with AdCMV-MCD had dramatically lowered intracellular malonyl CoA levels compared with AdCMV-betaGal-treated cells at both 3 and 20 mM glucose. Further, at 20 mM glucose, AdCMV-MCD-treated cells were less effective at suppressing [1-14C]palmitate oxidation and incorporated 43% less labeled palmitate and 50% less labeled glucose into cellular lipids than either AdCMV-betaGAL-treated or untreated INS-1 cells. Despite the large metabolic changes caused by expression of MCD, insulin secretion in response to glucose was unaltered relative to controls. The alternative, pharmacologic approach for perturbing lipid metabolism was to use triacsin C to inhibit long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase. This agent caused potent attenuation of palmitate oxidation and glucose or palmitate incorporation into cellular lipids and also caused a 47% decrease in total LC-CoA. Despite this, the drug had no effect on glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in islets or INS-1 cells. We conclude that significant disruption of the link between glucose and lipid metabolism does not impair glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in pancreatic islets or INS-1 cells.

Duke Scholars

Published In

J Biol Chem

DOI

ISSN

0021-9258

Publication Date

June 26, 1998

Volume

273

Issue

26

Start / End Page

16146 / 16154

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Triazenes
  • Rats
  • Palmitates
  • Malonyl Coenzyme A
  • Lipid Metabolism
  • Insulin Secretion
  • Insulin
  • Glucose
  • Enzyme Inhibitors
  • Coenzyme A Ligases
 

Citation

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Antinozzi, P. A., Segall, L., Prentki, M., McGarry, J. D., & Newgard, C. B. (1998). Molecular or pharmacologic perturbation of the link between glucose and lipid metabolism is without effect on glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. A re-evaluation of the long-chain acyl-CoA hypothesis. J Biol Chem, 273(26), 16146–16154. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.26.16146
Antinozzi, P. A., L. Segall, M. Prentki, J. D. McGarry, and C. B. Newgard. “Molecular or pharmacologic perturbation of the link between glucose and lipid metabolism is without effect on glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. A re-evaluation of the long-chain acyl-CoA hypothesis.J Biol Chem 273, no. 26 (June 26, 1998): 16146–54. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.26.16146.

Published In

J Biol Chem

DOI

ISSN

0021-9258

Publication Date

June 26, 1998

Volume

273

Issue

26

Start / End Page

16146 / 16154

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Triazenes
  • Rats
  • Palmitates
  • Malonyl Coenzyme A
  • Lipid Metabolism
  • Insulin Secretion
  • Insulin
  • Glucose
  • Enzyme Inhibitors
  • Coenzyme A Ligases