An Osmotic-sensitive Taurine Pool is Localized in Rat Pancreatic Islet Cells Containing Glucagon and Somatostatin
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Physiology
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Previous reports have dealt with the hypoglycemic properties of taurine and its effects on insulin secretion by adult and fetal isolated islets. We have studied the presence and cellular distribution of taurine in rat islets, the conditions to evoke its release, and its possible modulatory action on insulin secretion. We localized taurine by techniques of double immunolabeling in most glucagon-positive cells and in some somatostatin-positive cells, whereas insulin-positive cells were not labeled with the taurine antibody. Although high-glucose stimulation did not evoke any taurine release, a hyposmotic solution (17% osmolarity reduction) induced a specific phasic release of taurine and GABA (34 and 52% increase on their basal release rate). On the other hand, taurine (10 mmol/l) application slightly reduced the second phase of insulin secretion induced by glucose stimulation. In conclusion, taurine is highly concentrated in glucagon-containing cells of the islet periphery. It is not liberated by glucose stimulation but is strongly released under hyposmotic conditions. All of these data suggest that taurine plays an osmoregulatory role in alpha-cells.
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