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β-Cell-specific protein kinase A activation enhances the efficiency of glucose control by increasing acute-phase insulin secretion.

Diabetes · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a mouse study, increasing protein kinase A (PKA) activity in pancreatic cells boosted early insulin release by 3.5 times, lowering blood sugar to 58% of normal levels. This effect was similar to the impact of the diabetes drug exendin-4, which works through PKA. The results suggest PKA plays a key role in improving blood sugar control by enhancing insulin release.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes, 2013
Citations67
Relative citation ratio1.96
NIH percentile73
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Acute insulin secretion determines the efficiency of glucose clearance. Moreover, impaired acute insulin release is characteristic of reduced glucose control in the prediabetic state. Incretin hormones, which increase β-cell cAMP, restore acute-phase insulin secretion and improve glucose control. To determine the physiological role of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), a mouse model was developed to increase PKA activity specifically in the pancreatic β-cells. In response to sustained hyperglycemia, PKA activity potentiated both acute and sustained insulin release. In contrast, a glucose bolus enhanced acute-phase insulin secretion alone. Acute-phase insulin secretion was increased 3.5-fold, reducing circulating glucose to 58% of levels in controls. Exendin-4 increased acute-phase insulin release to a similar degree as PKA activation. However, incretins did not augment the effects of PKA on acute-phase insulin secretion, consistent with incretins acting primarily via PKA to potentiate acute-phase insulin secretion. Intracellular calcium signaling was unaffected by PKA activation, suggesting that the effects of PKA on acute-phase insulin secretion are mediated by the phosphorylation of proteins involved in β-cell exocytosis. Thus, β-cell PKA activity transduces the cAMP signal to dramatically increase acute-phase insulin secretion, thereby enhancing the efficiency of insulin to control circulating glucose.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23349500 ↗