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Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Lausanne (V.S., W.D., E.S., B.T.), CH-1005 Lausanne, Switzerland; the Department of Molecular Pharmacology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine (S.E.), Bronx, New York 10461; and the Endocrine Division, The Toronto Hospital (L.S., D.D.), Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 2C4
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Dr. Bernard Thorens, Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 27 rue du Bugnon, CH-1005 Lausanne, Switzerland. E-mail: bernard.thorens{at}ipharm.unil.ch
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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In the present report, we demonstrate that exendin-(939) is an inverse agonist of the murine ß-cell GLP-1 receptor and that decreasing the basal level of cAMP with this peptide strongly decreases the glucose-dependent insulin secretory activity. These data suggest, therefore, that the GLP-1 receptor is constitutively active in the ligand-free state and that this activity is important for maintaining the glucose competence of the ß-cells.
| Materials and Methods |
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Cells and culture
The ßTC-Tet cell line (13) was cultured in DMEM containing
2.5% FCS, 15% horse serum, 2 mM glutamine, and 50 U/ml
streptomycin/penicillin. They were used between passages 1725. For
the perifusion studies, clusters of ßTC-Tet cells of about 100 µm
in diameter were formed by culturing the cells in 10-cm petri dishes
maintained for 24 days on a rotating (70 rpm) platform placed in the
cell culture incubator. The ßTC-Tet cells were growth arrested in the
presence of 1 µg/ml tetracycline. The ßTCR- cell line
was established from ß-cell tumors that developed in
GLP-1-R-/- mice (14) crossed with RIP-Tag
mice (15) (our manuscript in preparation). The cells were
cultured in RPMI 1640 medium containing 10% FCS, 2 mM
glutamine, and 50 U/ml streptomycin/penicillin.
cAMP assays
cAMP assays were performed as described previously (16).
Briefly, cells were grown for 2 days in 12-well plates and loaded with
2 µCi tritiated adenine (TRK311, Amersham, Aylesbury, UK) for 5
h at 37 C. Cells were then washed twice with 130 mM NaCl,
20 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 0.9 mM
NaH2PO4, 0.8 mM MgSO4,
5.4 mM KCl, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 25
mM glucose, and 25 µM phenol red and exposed
to peptides at different concentrations in the presence of 0.1
mM forskolin for 8 min at 37 C. After removal of the
medium, cells were lysed with 1 ml 5% trichloroacetic acid containing
0.1 mM cAMP and 0.1 mM ATP. Tritiated cAMP was
sequentially separated on Dowex cation exchange resin and aluminum
oxide columns (17). For study of the effect of exendin-(939) on basal
cAMP levels, the cells were prelabeled with 10 µCi tritiated adenine
for 5 h at 37 C.
RNA extraction and Northern blot analysis
RNA was isolated by the guanidinium isothiocyanate method (18).
Total RNA was size-fractionated on 1 x
3-[N-morpholino] propanesulfonic acid-1.2% agarose
gels containing formaldehyde. Gels were transferred overnight by
diffusion [10 x SSC (standard saline citrate)] to a GeneScreen
membrane (DuPont, Wilmington, DE). Membranes were UV
cross-linked and prehybridized for 4 h at 42 C. After
prehybridization, the blots were hybridized with random primed
(Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) rat GLP-1
receptor (4) and proglucagon (19) probes in 5 x SSC, 100
mM NaPO4 (pH 6.5), 5 x Denhardts
solution, 50% formamide, 10 mM EDTA, 1% SDS, and 100
µg/ml yeast transfer RNA overnight at 42 C. The blots were washed in
2 x SSC at room temperature, followed, for the proglucagon blots,
by 2 x SSC-0.1 SDS at 42 C and 0.2 x SSC-0.1% SDS at 55 C.
Blots were then exposed to Hyperfilm-MP (Amersham) at -70 C.
Perifusion
Batches of 200300 ßTC-Tet clusters were placed in a
perifusion chamber. The perifusion buffer was a Krebs-Ringer solution
containing 0.5% BSA, and the flow rate was adjusted to 1 ml/min.
Perifusion experiments consisted of a 30-min equilibration period in
the presence of 2.8 mM glucose, a 15-min perifusion period
in the presence of 2.8 mM glucose and 0.1 mM
isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX), a 20-min stimulation period in the
presence of 11.1 mM glucose, 0.1 mM IBMX, and
the presence or absence of peptides, and a 20-min period in the
presence of 2.8 mM glucose and 0.1 mM IBMX. The
perifusion chamber was maintained at 37 C, and the gas phase was 95%
O2-5% CO2. Fractions were collected every
minute. Insulin was quantitated by RIA, using rat insulin as
standard.
Quantitative analysis
Results are presented as the mean ± SEM.
Statistical differences were analyzed by Students t
test.
| Results |
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First, we determined by Northern blot analysis that these cells express
the GLP-1 receptor in the proliferating and
growth-arrested state (not shown). The dose-dependent production of
intracellular cAMP in response to increasing concentrations of
GLP-1 was then evaluated. Figure 1
shows that both growth-arrested and
proliferating cells respond to the addition of GLP-1 with
EC50 values that were not significantly different
(2.05 ± 0.31 vs. 0.96 ± 0.20 nM for
growth-arrested and proliferating cells, respectively). Next, we
determined that the basal level of cAMP observed in the absence of
added GLP-1 could be decreased by increasing
concentrations of exendin-(939) (Fig. 2
). This effect was observed with
growth-arrested as well as proliferating cells. It was, however, not
observed with ßTC-R- cells, which do not express the
GLP-1 receptor. These cells have been established in
culture from pancreatic ß-cells of GLP-1 receptor
knockout mice expressing the SV-40 Tag under the control of the rat
insulin promoter. To ensure that the decrease in cAMP induced by
exendin-(939) was not due to displacement of GLP-1
ectopically expressed by the ßTC-Tet cells and bound to their own
receptors, we analyzed by Northern blot analysis the expression of the
preproglucagon messenger RNA (mRNA). As shown in Fig. 3
, proliferating ßTC-Tet cells express
some preproglucagon mRNA, but at a considerably lower level compared
with INR1-G9 glucagonoma cells. Importantly, when the cells were growth
arrested in the presence of tetracycline, preproglucagon mRNA was no
longer detectable. Also, no GLP-1 could be detected by RIA
(detection limit, 1 fmol) in the 24-h conditioned medium of 3 x
106 proliferating or growth-arrested cells. This indicates
that a simple antagonistic effect of exendin-(939) on preventing
endogenously produced GLP-1 from binding to the
GLP-1 receptor was unlikely to be the cause of the
decreased production of cAMP.
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| Discussion |
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The ßTC-Tet cells are conditionally immortalized cells whose proliferation can be stopped by tetracycline, as expression of the transforming SV-40 T antigen is under the control of a tetracycline-regulated promoter (13). These cells display normal glucose dose-dependent insulin secretion and an insulin content close to that of normal ß-cells. Here we further showed by Northern blot analysis that ßTC-Tet cells express the GLP-1 receptor, that they increase their intracellular cAMP content with the normal GLP-1 dose dependence, and that the glucose-dependent secretory activity can be amplified by GLP-1 similarly in growth-arrested and proliferating cells.
Exendin-(939) is a truncated form of exendin-4, a peptide isolated from the venom of Heloderma suspectum (20). Exendin-(939) is an antagonist of the rat and human GLP-1 receptors (21, 22). It has been used in in vivo experiments to evaluate the importance of GLP-1 insulinotropic activity on the control of postprandial insulin secretion and blood glucose levels (23, 24, 25). These experiments, performed in both rats and baboons, demonstrated that GLP-1 has an important role in the postprandial control of glycemia.
Here we demonstrated that exendin-(939) not only had an antagonistic activity on the GLP-1 receptor, but it dose dependently decreased the basal intracellular levels of cAMP in growth-arrested or proliferating ßTC-Tet cells. This effect was receptor specific, as it could not be observed in a ß-cell line lacking the GLP-1 receptor. Furthermore, the inhibitory effect could not be explained by a simple displacement by exendin-(939) of endogenously produced GLP-1 bound to the receptor, because the preproglucagon mRNA was no longer detectable in growth-arrested cells, and no radioimmunoassayable GLP-1 could be detected in proliferating or growth-arrested cells. Also, the maximal inhibitory capacity of exendin-(939) on basal cAMP appears greater, although the difference is not statistically significant, in growth- arrested compared with proliferating cells (49% vs. 36% of cAMP decrease for growth-arrested and proliferating ßTC-Tet cells, respectively) when preproglucagon mRNA is no longer detectable.
Previous reports evaluating the antagonistic activity of exendin-(939) did not observe this inhibitory effect on basal intracellular cAMP levels. This was tested with the insulinoma lines RINm5F (21) and HIT (26) or with fibroblasts stably transfected with the cloned human GLP-1 receptor (22). The present results may be due to species differences, as ßTC-Tet cells originate from mice, or possibly because ßTC-Tet cells have a much more differentiated phenotype than the other ß-cell lines studied. This is in particular demonstrated by their remarkably preserved glucose dose- dependent insulin secretory activity (13) (our unpublished observations).
Importantly, the inhibitory effect of exendin-(939) on cAMP production was correlated with an approximately 40% reduction in insulin secretory activity when perifusion experiments were performed in the presence of the peptide. A similar inhibitory effect was also observed when perifusions were carried out with isolated mouse pancreatic islets. In both conditions the first phase of secretion appeared unchanged, and only the second phase was reduced. This was observed when the peptide was introduced at the same time as well as several minutes before switching to the high glucose solution. However, when the ßTC-Tet cells were not in the growth-arrested state, this inhibitory effect on insulin secretion was not observed, although the effect on basal cAMP levels were present. Why a similar decrease in cAMP levels observed in both arrested and proliferating cells is not reflected by a similar change in secretory activity is not known. One can speculate that the stimulatory effect of cAMP, mediated by activation of protein kinase A, depends on the phosphorylation of multiple protein targets participating in the control of insulin granule exocytosis. In growth-arrested cells, which are more differentiated than proliferating cells, a protein may be expressed that exerts a negative control on exocytosis but whose effect can be relieved by phosphorylation. A decrease in the phosphorylation of this protein due to a decrease in basal cAMP may have a dominant inhibitory effect on the secretory activity of the cells. Although the exact mechanism is still hypothetical at this stage, proliferating and growth-arrested ßTC-Tet cells provide a unique system to study this regulatory event.
Our present results showing an important effect of exendin-(939)
on reducing the basal intracellular level of cAMP indicate that this
peptide is an inverse agonist of the GLP-1 receptor.
Consequently, this implies that the mouse receptor exists in ß-cells
in a constitutively activated state. Such a basal level of activity of
G protein-coupled receptors has been previously reported for the
ß2-adrenergic receptor (27, 28) or the
-opioid
receptor (29). This was demonstrated by the capability of specific
ligands, referred to as inverse agonists (30), to decrease the basal
level of cAMP production or the guanosine triphosphatase activity of G
proteins linked to the receptors. The in vivo role of such a
basal constitutive activity of the ß2-adrenergic receptor
or other receptors is not clearly established. Overexpression of the
ß2-adrenergic receptor in cardiomyocytes, however, led to
increased basal cAMP and increased atrial contractility and ventricular
function even in conditions in which the receptor was apparently not
stimulated by endogenous ligands (31). This suggested that the
constitutive activity of this receptor, at least when present at higher
than normal levels, could modify the function of an organ. Our study is
the first indication of a constitutive activity of the
GLP-1 receptor in ß-cells. Furthermore, this
constitutive activity appears important in the glucose-stimulated
insulin secretory response and, therefore, in maintaining the glucose
competence of the ß-cells.
These data may help understand previously published data that demonstrated that in mice with a homozygous null mutation of the GLP-1 receptor, fasting blood glucose levels were surprisingly elevated (14). The same study also reported that after an ip glucose tolerance test, the homozygous mutant mice displayed an abnormal glycemic response. This was unexpected because the ip injection of glucose should not activate the secretion of GLP-1 in either control or knockout mice and therefore should lead to the same glucose tolerance curves. As the glycemic levels were higher in GLP-1 receptor-/- mice, this suggests that the absence of a constitutively activated receptor leads to a reduced basal intracellular cAMP level and therefore a decreased glucose competence of the ß-cells. Our conclusions on the constitutive activity of the unliganded receptor could also explain in part observations reported by DAlessio et al. (25). These researchers showed that the fasting blood glucose levels of baboons could be increased by exendin-(939), but not by anti-GLP-1 antibodies. In fasting, the circulating GLP-1 levels are already very low, and further immunoneutralization of the peptide has no effect on basal glycemia, whereas exendin-(939), acting directly at the receptor level, promoted this increase in glycemia. These effects, however, were accompanied only by a small, nonsignificant decrease in plasma insulin and a significant increase in glucagon levels.
Whether the GLP-1 receptor is constitutively active in ß-cells from other animal species and in humans needs to be directly tested. Our data nevertheless suggest an important role for the GLP-1 receptor not only in the postprandial stimulation of glucose-induced insulin secretion when plasma levels of both glucose and this hormone are elevated due to nutrient ingestion but also in the glucose competence of ß-cells when the level of extracellular glucose rises in the absence of added gluco-incretin hormones.
| Footnotes |
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Received February 23, 1998.
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opioid receptors coupled to
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