Stimulation of insulin release by glyceraldehyde may not be similar to glucose

2006 
Abstract Glyceraldehyde (GA) has been used to study insulin secretion for decades and it is widely assumed that β-cell metabolism of GA after its phosphorylation by triokinase is similar to metabolism of glucose; that is metabolism through distal glycolysis and oxidation in mitochondria. New data supported by existing information indicate that this is true for only a small amount of GA’s metabolism and also suggest why GA is toxic. GA is metabolized at 10–20% the rate of glucose in pancreatic islets, even though GA is a more potent insulin secretagogue. GA also inhibits glucose metabolism to CO 2 out of proportion to its ability to replace glucose as a fuel. This study is the first to measure methylglyoxal (MG) in β-cells and shows that GA causes large increases in MG in INS-1 cells and d -lactate in islets but MG does not mediate GA-induced insulin release. GA severely lowers NAD(P) and increases NAD(P)H in islets. High NADH combined with GA’s metabolism to CO 2 may initially hyperstimulate insulin release, but a low cytosolic NAD/NADH ratio will block glycolysis at glyceraldehyde phosphate (GAP) dehydrogenase and divert GAP toward MG and d -lactate formation. Accumulation of d -lactate and 1-phosphoglycerate may explain why GA makes the β-cell acidic. Reduction of both GA and MG by abundant β-cell aldehyde reductases will lower the cytosolic NADPH/NADP ratio, which is normally high.
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