Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 285, Issue 22, 28 May 2010, Pages 16530-16537
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Metabolism
The Mitochondrial 2-Oxoglutarate Carrier Is Part of a Metabolic Pathway That Mediates Glucose- and Glutamine-stimulated Insulin Secretion*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.092593 Get rights and content
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Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from pancreatic islet β-cells is dependent in part on pyruvate cycling through the pyruvate/isocitrate pathway, which generates cytosolic α-ketoglutarate, also known as 2-oxoglutarate (2OG). Here, we have investigated if mitochondrial transport of 2OG through the 2-oxoglutarate carrier (OGC) participates in control of nutrient-stimulated insulin secretion. Suppression of OGC in clonal pancreatic β-cells (832/13 cells) and isolated rat islets by adenovirus-mediated delivery of small interfering RNA significantly decreased glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. OGC suppression also reduced insulin secretion in response to glutamine plus the glutamate dehydrogenase activator 2-amino-2-norbornane carboxylic acid. Nutrient-stimulated increases in glucose usage, glucose oxidation, glutamine oxidation, or ATP:ADP ratio were not affected by OGC knockdown, whereas suppression of OGC resulted in a significant decrease in the NADPH:NADP+ ratio during stimulation with glucose but not glutamine + 2-amino-2-norbornane carboxylic acid. Finally, OGC suppression reduced insulin secretion in response to a membrane-permeant 2OG analog, dimethyl-2OG. These data reveal that the OGC is part of a mechanism of fuel-stimulated insulin secretion that is common to glucose, amino acid, and organic acid secretagogues, involving flux through the pyruvate/isocitrate cycling pathway. Although the components of this pathway must remain intact for appropriate stimulus-secretion coupling, production of NADPH does not appear to be the universal second messenger signal generated by these reactions.

Diabetes
Metabolic Regulation
Mitochondrial Transport
Pancreatic Islet
siRNA
Insulin Secretion

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*

This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants DK-42583 and DK-58398 (to C. B. N.). This work was also supported by a Canadian Institute of Health Research grant (to J. W. J.).

1

Both authors contributed equally to this work.