Abstract:
Sulfonylurea receptor 1 (SUR1) is the regulatory subunit of the pancreatic ATP-sensitive K+ channel (KATP channel), which is essential for triggering insulin secretion via membrane depolarization. Sulfonylureas, such as glibenclamide and tolbutamide, act as KATP channel blockers and are widely used in diabetes treatment. These antidiabetic substances are known to induce apoptosis in pancreatic beta-cells or beta-cell lines under certain conditions. However, the precise molecular mechanisms of this sulfonylurea-induced apoptosis are still unidentified. To investigate the role of SUR in apoptosis induction, we tested the effect of glibenclamide on recombinant human embryonic kidney 293 cells expressing either SUR1, the smooth muscular isoform SUR2B, or the mutant SUR1(M1289T) at which a single amino acid in transmembrane helix 17 (TM17) was exchanged by the corresponding amino acid of SUR2. By analyzing cell detachment, nuclear condensation, DNA fragmentation, and caspase-3-like activity, we observed a SUR1-specific enhancement of glibenclamide-induced apoptosis that was not seen in SUR2B, SUR1(M1289T), or control cells. Coexpression with the pore-forming Kir6.2 subunit did not significantly alter the apoptotic effect of glibenclamide on SUR1 cells. In conclusion, expression of SUR1, but not of SUR2B or SUR1(M1289T), renders cells more susceptible to glibenclamide-induced apoptosis. Therefore, SUR1 as a pancreatic protein could be involved in specific variation of beta-cell mass and might also contribute to the regulation of insulin secretion at this level. According to our results, TM17 is essentially involved in SUR1-mediated apoptosis. This effect does not require the presence of functional Kir6.2-containing KATP channels, which points to additional, so far unknown functions of SUR.
SUR binds nucleotides and synthetic KATP channel modulators, e.g. the antidiabetic sulfonylurea glibenclamide, which acts as a channel blocker. However, knowledge about naturally occurring ligands of SUR is very limited. In this study, we show that the plant phenolic compound trans-resveratrol can bind to SUR and displace binding of glibenclamide. Electrophysiological measurements revealed that resveratrol is a blocker of pancreatic SUR1/Kir6.2 KATP channels. We further demonstrate that, like glibenclamide, resveratrol induces enhanced apoptosis. This was shown by analyzing different apoptotic parameters (cell detachment, nuclear condensation and fragmentation, and activities of different caspase enzymes). The observed apoptotic effect was specific to cells expressing the SUR1 isoform and was not mediated by the electrical activity of KATP channels, as it was observed in human embryonic kidney 293 cells expressing SUR1 alone. Enhanced susceptibility to resveratrol was not observed in pancreatic beta-cells from SUR1 knock-out mice or in cells expressing the isoform SUR2A or SUR2B or the mutant SUR1(M1289T). Resveratrol was much more potent than glibenclamide in inducing SUR1-specific apoptosis. Treatment with etoposide, a classical inducer of apoptosis, did not result in SUR isoform-specific apoptosis. In conclusion, resveratrol is a natural SUR ligand that can induce apoptosis in a SUR isoform-specific manner. Considering the tissue-specific expression patterns of SUR isoforms and the possible effects of SUR mutations on susceptibility to apoptosis, these observations could be important for diabetes and/or cancer research.