Magnesium Uptake By Pancreatic-islet Cells Is Modulated By Stimulators and Inhibitors of the B-cell Function

1986 
28Mg2+ uptake by rat islets was measured during incubation with various stimulators or inhibitors of insulin release. D-Glucose induced a dose-dependent increase in 28Mg2+ uptake after 10 min or 120 min. The threshold concentration was around 6 mM and the maximum effect was observed with 15–20 mM glucose. After 120 min 28Mg2+ uptake was also stimulated by the metabolized sugars mannose, N-acetylglucosamine or glyceraldehyde, was unaffected by the non-metabolized or poorly metabolized L-glucose, galactose, 3-O-methylglucose, 2-deoxyglucose, fructose or mannoheptulose and was inhibited by glucosamine. The effect of glucose was markedly impaired by mannoheptulose, glucosamine, aminooxyacetate and NH4Cl, but was only partially decreased by D600 or diazoxide, which were ineffective in a glucose-free medium. Tolbutamide or KCl slightly increased 28Mg2+ uptake. Alanine, leucine alone or with glutamine, and ketoisocaproate also stimulated 28Mg2+ uptake, whereas arginine and lysine decreased it. These changes in 28Mg2+ uptake, brought about by various modifiers of the B-cell function, are thus similar but not identical to the changes in Ca2+ uptake, and are not the consequence of insulin release. The stimulatory effect of glucose requires glucose metabolism by islet cells, but is only partially due to depolarization of the B-cell membrane.
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