Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : A rise in the extracellular concentration of glucose from an intermediate to a high value changes the burst pattern of electrical activity of the pancreatic B-cell into a continuous firing, and yet activates the B-cell Ca2+-sensitive K+ permeability. The hypothesis that glucose exerts such effects by inhibiting the Na+, K+-ATPase was investigated. Ouabain (1 mM) mimicked the effect of 16.7 mM glucose in stimulating 86Rb, 45Ca outflow and insulin release from perifused rat pancreatic islets first exposed to 8.3 mM glucose. The stimulation by ouabain of 86Rb outflow was reduced in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ and almost completely abolished in the presence of quinine, and inhibitor of the Ca2+-sensitive K+ permeability. In the presence of ouabain, a rise in the glucose concentration from 8.3 to 16.7 mM failed to stimulate 86Rb outflow. However, the rise in the glucose concentration failed to inhibit 86Rb influx in islet cells, while ouabain dramatically reduced 86Rb influx whether in the presence of 8.3 or 16.7 mM glucose. These findings do not suggest that inhibition of the B-cell Na+, K+-ATPase represents the mechanism by which glucose in high concentration stimulates 86Rb outflow and induces continuous electrical activity in the B-cell.