From the Division of Pediatric Endocrinology (A.G., R.J.F., A.K., S.K.-M., L.B., C.A.S.), the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; the Division Endocrinology (K.P.), University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois; the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism (B.G.), Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel; the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism (M.A.P.), Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri; the Division of Medicine (L.A.-B.), Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; the Division of Endocrinology (D.S.), Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; and the Division of Metabolism (P.S.T.), the Children's Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Charles A. Stanley, MD, Division of Pediatric Endocrinology, the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 34th St. and Civic Center Blvd., Philadelphia, PA 19104. E-mail: stanley{at}email.chop.edu .
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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The KATP channel complex transduces the metabolic status of the ß-cell into cell membrane electrical activity and thereby links insulin release with metabolic demands. SUR1, a member of the ATP-binding cassette superfamily, forms a hetero-octamer with Kir6.2 (20,21). Glucose entry and metabolism increase the ratio of ATP to ADP within the ß-cell. At very high concentrations, ATP binding to Kir6.2 inhibits the channel activity, whereas magnesium nucleotides can antagonize this inhibition through interactions with the nucleotide binding folds of the SUR1 (22). The increased ATP-to-ADP ratio leads to closure of the KATP channel and hence depolarization of the ß-cell membrane. The depolarization opens voltage-gated calcium channels, and the resultant elevation of the intracellular calcium concentration triggers exocytosis of insulin granules (23,24). Sulfonylureas modulate insulin secretion by binding to SUR1; some, like tolbutamide, stimulate insulin secretion, whereas others, like diazoxide, inhibit it.
The present study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that mutations in SUR1, the metabolic transducer, would render the ß-cell unresponsive to sulfonylureas and insensitive to high or rising glucose levels as well as to falling glucose levels. Insulin responses to tolbutamide, a sulfonylurea that stimulates insulin release, and to both acute and prolonged graded glucose stimulation were measured in children with diffuse SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism. The effects of heterozygous SUR1 mutations were investigated by evaluating insulin secretion in the heterozygous parents of these children.
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RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
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Control subjects included four female and two male SUR1+/- heterozygous carrier parents aged 36-48 years, and six female and four male normal adults aged 19-48 years. All control subjects were normoglycemic, and none had a history of diabetes. All had normal fasting blood glucose and insulin levels.
The study was reviewed and approved by the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Institutional Review Board. Written informed consent was obtained from the subjects or their parents before participation in the study. Verbal assent was obtained from the older children.
Acute insulin responses. Subjects were admitted to the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia General Clinical Research Center. Octreotide or glucagon therapy was withdrawn for at least 24 h before study, and dextrose was infused intravenously as necessary to prevent hypoglycemia. Studies were carried out after an overnight fast, and dextrose was infused as needed to maintain the blood glucose concentration between 60 and 80 mg/dl. Two peripheral venous catheters were inserted: one for infusion and the other for blood sampling. Glucose (0.5 g/kg to a maximum of 20 g) was administered intravenously over 2 min. Twenty minutes later, tolbutamide (25 mg/kg to a maximum of 1 g) was administered intravenously over 1 min. Blood samples for glucose and insulin concentrations were obtained at -10, -5, and 0 min before the glucose bolus and at 1, 3, 5, 10, and 20 min afterwards. After the tolbutamide injection, blood samples were collected at 1, 3, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, and 60 min. Whole blood glucose was measured by the glucose oxidase method (Glucose Analyzer; Yellow Springs Instruments, Yellow Springs, OH). Plasma insulin concentrations were measured by microenzyme immunoparticle assay with a sensitivity of 1.0 µU/ml (Abbott IMx, Abbott Park, IL). Acute insulin responses (AIRs) were calculated as the mean of the increment in insulin concentration at 1 and 3 min after stimulation. Glucose disposal rate was calculated from the glucose decay curve after intravenous glucose as the percent decline per minute.
Graded glucose infusion studies. Studies were performed after an overnight fast, and intravenous dextrose was administered as needed to maintain the blood glucose concentration between 60 and 80 mg/dl. Glucose was infused for a total of 4 h. Every 40 min, the rate of glucose infusion was increased from 0 to 4, 8, and 16 mg · kg-1 · min-1 and then decreased again to 8, 4, and 0 mg · kg-1 · min-1. Blood glucose and plasma insulin concentrations were measured at baseline and every 10 min throughout the infusion. Insulin concentrations were plotted against glucose levels, resulting in two curves for each subject: the up curve corresponding to the escalating rate of dextrose infusion and the down curve to the diminishing rate of dextrose infusion that followed. Glucose sensitivity was quantified as the slope of the up curve (µU · mg-1 · 10-2). Differences between the up and down curves were analyzed two ways. The insulin displacement was calculated as the difference between the up- and down-curve insulin concentrations at the approximate midpoint value between the peak and basal glucose concentrations (blood glucose of 150 mg/dl), expressed as a percent of the up-curve value. The second analysis used a comparison of the linear phases of the up and down curves.
Statistical analysis. All data are presented as means ± SE. An alternate Welch t test was used to compare the results between the different groups.
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RESULTS |
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Table 2 compares the results
of the AIR tests in the group of eight children with diffuse
SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism, their carrier parents, and normal adults.
Baseline insulin levels in the SUR1-/- group were comparable to
those in the normal adults. AIR to tolbutamide was absent in the children with
diffuse hyperinsulinism (P < 0.005). The 95% CI of the AIR to
tolbutamide in the diffuse hyperinsulinemic patients (-2.3 to 3.7 µU/ml)
did not overlap with the normal control subjects (26.4-79.7 µU/ml). Glucose
stimulation provoked a positive but smaller AIR in the diffuse
hyperinsulinemic patients (P < 0.05). The glucose disposal rates
among the SUR1-/- children and the normal adult groups were
similar. Mean insulin responses to the two AIR tests did not differ among the
four children with homozygous 3992 -9 g a mutations and the four
children with compound heterozygous DelF 1388/3992 -9 g
a mutations
(AIR tolbutamide -0.5 ± 2 vs. 2 ± 2 µU/ml and AIR glucose 8
± 3 vs. 20 ± 6 µU/ml, respectively). There was also no
difference between the five SUR1-/- children who had undergone
subtotal pancreatectomy and the three without surgery (AIR tolbutamide -0.1
± 2 vs. 2 ± 1 µU/ml and AIR glucose 13 ± 4 vs. 17
± 8 µU/ml, respectively).
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As shown in Table 2, AIRs to both glucose and tolbutamide were similar in the SUR1+/- carriers and the normal adults. The 95% CI of the AIR to tolbutamide in the diffuse hyperinsulinemic patients did not overlap with that of the carriers (9.7-52.3 µU/ml). The glucose disposal rates of the carriers were also similar to those of the normal adults.
Insulin response to graded glucose infusion. Graded glucose infusion studies were performed in three children with SUR1-/- diffuse hyperinsulinism who had not undergone subtotal pancreatectomy. Surgery-naive patients were chosen for this study to eliminate subtotal pancreatectomy as a potential confounding variable that could cause impaired glucose responsiveness. Figure 2 shows the blood glucose and plasma insulin concentrations in the graded glucose infusion studies of the same SUR1-/- child (number 6) and normal adult control as in Fig. 1. In the normal adult (Fig. 2A), the rise and subsequent fall in blood glucose was associated with a parallel, though slightly delayed, rise and fall in insulin concentration (peak 87 µU/ml). As shown in Fig. 2B, child number 6 with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism had a similar rise and fall in blood glucose but achieved a peak insulin concentration of only 29 µU/ml despite a higher peak blood glucose concentration. Figure 3 shows the insulin concentrations plotted against blood glucose concentrations from the studies of Fig. 2. The slope of the up curve was steeper in the normal adult (37 µU · mg-1 · 10-2) than in the child with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism (4 µU · mg-1 · 10-2), indicating diminished sensitivity to glucose for insulin secretion in the patient.
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Table 3 summarizes the results of the graded glucose infusion studies in the three children with SUR1-/- diffuse hyper-insulinism, five SUR+/- carriers, and four normal adults. Because there was no difference between the carriers and normal control subjects on either AIR or on any of the graded glucose infusion parameters assessed, the two adult groups were combined for data analysis. Peak blood glucose concentration in the SUR1-/- children (298 ± 50 mg/dl) was equivalent to that in the adults. The peak plasma insulin concentrations in the SUR1-/- children overlapped the lower end of values seen in the adults, but the mean insulin concentration was significantly less in the former group (P < 0.05). Glucose sensitivity in the SUR1-/- children also was less than that in the adults (P < 0.01). There was no insulin displacement at 150 mg/dl glucose in the children with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism. When insulin levels were plotted against blood glucose concentrations, the control subjects showed a hysteresis loop that resulted in a greater slope for the down curve compared with the up curve (124 ± 43 vs. 57 ± 13 µU · mg-1 · 10-2; P < 0.05 by a paired non-parametric test). The SUR1-/- children had loss of the hysteresis loop, with down slopes that were similar to the up slopes (11 ± 3 vs. 4 ± 2 µU · mg-1 · 10-2; NS).
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DISCUSSION |
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Patients with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism had no AIR to tolbutamide. A previous report by Ehrlich and Martin (27) found excessive insulin release in response to intravenous tolbutamide in 15 children with idiopathic hypoglycemia. The earlier study, however, measured glucose and insulin responses from 15 to 120 min after tolbutamide and did not assess the immediate response. Furthermore, the cause(s) of hypoglycemia in these children was not known and likely represented a heterogeneous group of disorders (not necessarily diffuse SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism). Intravenous tolbutamide tests have also been used in the assessment of patients with insulinomas, again looking only at delayed (120-180 min) responses (28).
The loss of AIR to tolbutamide in children with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism is not surprising given the fact that tolbutamide binds to SUR1 and these children have a lack of KATP channel activity due to defective SUR1 proteins (29). Sharma et al. (30) have reported that the truncated and misfolded mutant SUR1 proteins do not transit to the plasma membrane. Similarly, these children are clinically unresponsive to treatment with diazoxide, which inhibits insulin secretion by binding to SUR1. Loss of AIR to tolbutamide can therefore serve as a diagnostic marker for children who will not benefit from diazoxide therapy, although it is remotely possible that an SUR1 mutation different from those studied here may allow the molecule to respond to one or the other ligand. Patients with mutations in Kir6.2 would be expected to have the same responses as those with SUR1 mutations, since both components of the KATP channel are required for normal channel activity.
The complete loss of AIR to tolbutamide but only partial blunting of AIR to glucose provides evidence that KATP channel-independent pathways are involved in glucose-mediated insulin secretion in children with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism. The existence of KATP channel-independent pathways has been suggested by studies of islets from rats and mice (31,32,33) and was recently demonstrated in human islets in vitro (34). The precise KATP channel-independent pathways are still unclear (35). Proposed mechanisms include glucose-mediated elevations in intracellular calcium concentrations via mobilization of calcium sequestered in the endoplasmic reticulum (36,37,38). Intracellular calcium release may involve inositol-1,4,5-triphosphate (39) or the calcium release-activated nonselective cation channel (iCRAN) (40,41). Furthermore, a non-calcium-dependent mechanism involving protein kinases A and C, ATP, and GTP has been suggested (42).
The reduced AIR to glucose and the diminished glucose sensitivity on graded glucose infusion studies suggest that SUR1-/- ß-cells are less glucose responsive. Additionally, the insulin displacement at 150 mg/dl glucose is lost in children with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism. Both factors may lead to postprandial hyperglycemia in children with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism. These findings corroborate the clinical observation that hyperinsulinemic patients can exhibit episodes of both hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia, sometimes even in the same day. Recent studies in SUR1-/- knockout (and Kir6.2 knockout) mice did not have the severe hypoglycemia seen in the human disease but demonstrated a loss of first-phase and attenuated second-phase glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, consistent with the impairments in the AIR to glucose and glucose sensitivity observed in the present studies (43). Insulin secretory defects on intravenous glucose tolerance testing and graded glucose infusions have been reported in different types of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and autosomal-dominantly inherited forms of diabetes caused by non-SUR1 single-gene mutations (44,45,46). In one MODY family studied, reductions in insulin secretory oscillations during prolonged glucose infusion were also detected in genetic marker-positive family members who were not yet diabetic (47). This closely resembles our children with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism who, because of their single gene defect, exhibited abnormal insulin release on graded glucose infusion, but who were not diabetic. The finding of normal glucose disposal rates in the children with diffuse SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism suggests that they may have adapted to impaired insulin release by increasing peripheral sensitivity to insulin. The AIR to glucose did not differ between the children with diffuse SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism who had and those who had not undergone subtotal pancreatectomy, and the abnormal response to graded glucose infusion was found in our SUR1-/- hyperinsulinemic patients without surgical intervention. This finding suggests that SUR1-/- ß-cells may contribute, independently of subtotal pancreatectomy, to the increased risk of diabetes seen in diffuse SUR1-/- hyperinsulinemic patients.
The children with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism had no insulin displacement at 150 mg/dl glucose. It is unclear whether this signifies loss of the normal glucose potentiation of insulin release or loss of the normal lag in the suppression of the insulin secretory response to a falling glucose. It is also possible that the flat glucose sensitivity curve of the patients with diffuse SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism made it difficult to detect any glucose potentiation. In any case, the hysteresis loop formed by the difference in insulin levels along the up and down curves in the control subjects was not apparent in the children with SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism. Presumably, this observation is due to the loss of KATP channel activity and provides further evidence of the glucose blindness of SUR1-/- ß-cells. How this effect relates to the glucose potentiation of insulin secretion (48,49,50,51) is unknown. Further studies of glucose responsiveness in children with hyperinsulinism are needed to better understand how this phenomenon is altered by SUR1 mutations.
The heterozygous SUR1+/- carrier parents demonstrated normal insulin release on both AIRs and graded glucose infusion studies. Thus, performance of AIR testing and graded glucose infusion studies on parents of children with hyperinsulinism cannot serve as a simple clinical way of identifying heterozygous carriers and thereby predicting which families potentially transmit paternal-only or autosomal recessive SUR1 mutations. The normal responses seen in the heterozygous SUR1+/- parents also suggest that in nonobese individuals without a history of diabetes, carrying one mutated SUR1 allele does not increase the risk of hypoglycemia or diabetes.
Because patients with the different types of hyperinsulinism follow markedly different clinical courses, including responsiveness to medical therapies such as diazoxide, identifying the type of hyperinsulinism in any given patient allows individualized tailoring of the therapeutic plan for that patient. Furthermore, the diagnosis of diffuse versus focal hyperinsulinism is currently based on histopathologic examination of subtotal pancreatectomy specimens; genetic analysis of the SUR1 mutations is still available only through research laboratories. This distinction is important because local excision in focal hyperinsulinism is far preferable to blind 95% subtotal pancreatectomy; local excision carries a lower risk of complications and is potentially curative. Complete loss of AIR to tolbutamide constitutes a potentially valuable clinical method for preoperatively identifying children with diffuse hyperinsulinism. Because children with focal hyperinsulinism also have a subpopulation of normal ß-cells outside their focal lesion, they would be expected to retain an AIR to tolbutamide and have an AIR to glucose intermediate between that seen in the patients with diffuse hyperinsulinism and that seen in normal individuals. Further studies of patients with congenital hyperinsulinism at the time of diagnosis (both diffuse and focal) are needed to confirm the predictive value of the AIR to tolbutamide as a clinical marker for diffuse disease.
In summary, the loss of AIR to tolbutamide may be a useful clinical identifier of children with congenital hyperinsulinism due to diffuse SUR1-/- mutations. The reduced glucose responsiveness of SUR1-/- also has ramifications for the care of children with congenital hyperinsulinism. The primary glucose-sensing defect in diffuse SUR1-/- hyperinsulinism may directly contribute, independently from surgical treatment, to the increased risk of diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance in these patients. Furthermore, investigations of the insulin secretory dynamics in patients with diffuse SUR1-/- mutations may shed light on normal ß-cell signaling. Our study provides the first in vivo evidence of the involvement of KATP channel-independent pathways in glucose-mediated insulin secretion in humans.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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The authors wish to thank the nursing staff of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the staff of the General Clinical Research Center for their expert assistance in carrying out these studies.
This study was presented in part at the Second International Conference on ATP Sensitive Potassium Channels and Disease, St. Charles, IL, September 1998, and at the 81st Annual Meeting of the Endocrine Society, San Diego, CA, June 1999.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Received for publication April 11, 2000 and accepted in revised form August 24, 2000
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REFERENCES |
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