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D-glucose-sensitive neurosecretory cells of the crab Cancer borealis and negative feedback regulation of blood glucose level

Journal of Experimental Biology, ISSN: 0022-0949, Vol: 200, Issue: 10, Page: 1421-1431
1997
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Article Description

We studied the effects of glucose on cultured X-organ neurons of the crab Cancer borealis using single-electrode current- and voltage-clamp techniques. A subpopulation of the cells responded to D-glucose with a hyperpolarization. These cells, but not glucose-insensitive cells, showed immunoreactivity to crustacean hyperglycemic hormone (CHH), the hormone responsible for the elevation of blood glucose levels in crustaceans. Glucose-sensitive cells were also inhibited by serotonin and γ-aminobutyric acid but were not affected by dopamine and Leu-enkephalin. The response was specific for D-glucose, with an EC of 0.25 mmol l. No response was seen to L-glucose, sucrose, galactose, mannose or fructose. The glucose response persisted in the absence of extracellular Na and in low-Ca/Mn saline. In voltage-clamp experiments, D-glucose evoked a small current with a reversal potential close to that of voltage-dependent K currents. We conclude that D-glucose activates a K current in CHH-immunoreactive cells that, in normal saline, induces a hyperpolarization. We propose that this enables glucose to regulate directly the release of CHH into the hemolymph, thus constituting a negative feedback mechanism regulating hemolymph glucose concentration.

Bibliographic Details

Regina M. Glowik; Jorge Golowasch; Eve Marder; Rainer Keller

The Company of Biologists

Agricultural and Biological Sciences; Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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