Canna~Fangled Abstracts

Evaluation of the insulin releasing and antihyperglycaemic activities of GPR55 lipid agonists using clonal beta-cells, isolated pancreatic islets and mice.

By September 3, 2013No Comments
pm1[Epub ahead of print]

Evaluation of the insulin releasing and antihyperglycaemic activities of GPR55 lipid agonists using clonal beta-cells, isolated pancreatic islets and mice.

Source

Biomedical Sciences Research Institute, SAAD Centre for Pharmacy & Diabetes, University of Ulster, Cromore Road, Coleraine, BT52 1SA, Northern Ireland.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:

G-protein coupled receptor (GPR)55 is a novel lipid sensing receptor activated by both cannabinoid endogenous ligands (endocannabinoids) and other non-cannabinoid lipid transmitters. This study assessed the effects of various GPR55 agonists on glucose homeostasis.

EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH:

Insulin secretion and changes in intracellular Ca2+ and cAMP in response to glucose and a range of GPR55 agonists (endogenous ligands (OEA, PEA), chemically synthetic CBD analogues (Abn-CBD, 0-1602), an analogue of rimonabant (AM-251) and antagonist (CBD)) were investigated in clonal BRIN-BD11 cells and mouse pancreatic islets. Cytotoxicity was assessed by LDH release, cellular localisation by double-staining immunohistochemistry and in vivo effects assessed in mice.

KEY RESULTS:

The most potent and selective GPR55 agonist was the synthetic CBD analogue, Abn-CBD (pEC50 10.33), maximum stimulation of 67% at 10-4 mol/l (p<0.001) in BRIN-BD11 cells. AM-251 (pEC50 7.0), OEA (pEC50 7.0), 0-1602 (pEC50 7.3) and PEA (pEC50 6.0) stimulated insulin secretion. Results were corroborated by islet studies, with no cytotoxic effects. Concentration-dependent insulin secretion by GPR55 agonists was glucose-sensitive and accompanied by elevations of [Ca2+ ]i (p<0.01-p<0.001) and cAMP (p<0.05-p<0.01). GPR55 agonists exhibited insulinotropic and glucose lowering activity in vivo. GPR55 was expressed on BRIN-BD11 cells and confined to islet beta cells with no distribution on alpha cells.

CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS:

These results demonstrate GPR55 is distributed in pancreatic beta cells and is a strong activator of insulin secretion, with glucose-lowering effects in vivo. Development of agents agonising the GPR55 receptor may have therapeutic potential in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

KEYWORDS:

BRIN-BD11 cells, GPR55, glucose tolerance, insulin secretion, isolated islets, lipid agonists

PMID:

 23992544
[PubMed – as supplied by publisher]potp font 1