Prolonged exposure to homocysteine results in diminished but reversible pancreatic _-cell responsiveness to insulinotropic agents
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Date
2007-05
Authors
Patterson, Steven
Scullion, Siobhan M. J.
McCluskey, Jane T.
Flatt, Peter R.
McClenaghan, Neville H.
Citation
Patterson, S., Scullion, S.M.J., McCluskey, J.T., Flatt, P.R. and McClenaghan, N.H. (2007) ‘Prolonged exposure to homocysteine results in diminished but reversible pancreatic β-cell responsiveness to insulinotropic agents’, Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews, 23(4), pp. 324–334. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1002/dmrr.699.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Plasma homocysteine levels may be elevated in poorly controlled diabetes with pre-existing vascular complications and/or nephropathy. Since homocysteine has detrimental effects on a wide diversity of cell types, the present study examined the effects of long-term homocysteine exposure on the secretory function of clonal BRIN-BD11 beta-cells.
METHODS:
Acute insulin secretory function, cellular insulin content and viability of BRIN-BD11 cells were assessed following long-term (18 h) exposure to homocysteine in culture. RT-PCR and Western blot analysis were used to determine the expression of key beta-cell genes and proteins. Cells were cultured for a further 18 h without homocysteine to determine any long-lasting effects.
RESULTS:
Homocysteine (250-1000 micromol/L) exposure reduced insulin secretion at both moderate (5.6 mmol/L) and stimulatory (16.7 mmol/L) glucose by 48-63%. Similarly, insulin secretory responsiveness to stimulatory concentrations of alanine, arginine, 2-ketoisocaproate, tolbutamide, KCl, elevated Ca2+, forskolin and PMA, GLP-1, GIP and CCK-8 were reduced by 11-62% following culture with 100-250 micromol/L homocysteine. These inhibitory effects could not simply be attributed to changes in cellular insulin content, cell viability, H2O2 generation or any obvious alterations of gene/protein expression for insulin, glucokinase, GLUT2, VDCC, or Kir6.2 and SUR1. Additional culture for 18 h in standard culture media after homocysteine exposure restored secretory responsiveness to all agents tested.
CONCLUSION:
These findings suggest that long-term exposure to high homocysteine levels causes a reversible impairment of pancreatic beta-cell insulinotropic pathways. The in vivo actions of hyperhomocysteinaemia on islet cell function merit investigation.