Methyl succinate antagonises biguanide-induced AMPK-activation and death of pancreatic beta-cells through restoration of mitochondrial electron transfer

Simon Hinke, Geert Martens, Ying Cai, Jamil Finsi, Henry Heimberg, Daniel Pipeleers, Mark Van De Casteele

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    69 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Two mechanisms have been proposed to explain the insulin-sensitising properties of metformin in peripheral tissues: (a) inhibition of electron transport chain complex I, and (b) activation of the AMP activated protein kinase (AMPK). However the relationship between these mechanisms and their contribution to beta-cell death and dysfunction in vitro, are currently unclear.
    EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: The effects of biguanides (metformin and phenformin) were tested on MIN6 beta-cells and primary FACS-purified rat beta-cells. Cell metabolism was assessed biochemically and by FACS analysis, and correlated with AMPK phosphorylation state and cell viability, with or without fuel substrates.
    KEY RESULTS: In MIN6 cells, metformin reduced mitochondrial complex I activity by up to 44% and a 25% net reduction in mitochondrial reducing potential. In rat beta-cells, metformin caused NAD(P)H accumulation above maximal glucose-inducible levels, mimicking the effect of rotenone. Drug exposure caused phosphorylation of AMPK on Thr(172) in MIN6 cell extracts, indicative of kinase activation. Methyl succinate, a complex II substrate, appeared to bypass metformin blockade of complex I. This resulted in reduced phosphorylation of AMPK, establishing a link between biguanide-induced mitochondrial inhibition and AMPK activation. Corresponding assessment of cell death indicated that methyl succinate decreased biguanide toxicity to beta-cells in vitro.
    CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: AMPK activation can partly be attributed to metformin's inhibitory action on mitochondrial complex I. Anaplerotic fuel metabolism via complex II rescued beta-cells from metformin-associated toxicity. We propose that utilisation of anaplerotic nutrients may reconcile in vitro and in vivo effects of metformin on the pancreatic beta-cell.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1031-1043
    Number of pages13
    JournalBritish Journal of Pharmacology
    Volume150
    Publication statusPublished - 2007

    Keywords

    • insulin
    • diabetes mellitus
    • apoptosis
    • LKB1
    • islets of Langerhans
    • metformin
    • AMP activated protein kinase
    • anaplerosis

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