1. Academic Validation
  2. TRPM2 activation by cyclic ADP-ribose at body temperature is involved in insulin secretion

TRPM2 activation by cyclic ADP-ribose at body temperature is involved in insulin secretion

  • EMBO J. 2006 May 3;25(9):1804-15. doi: 10.1038/sj.emboj.7601083.
Kazuya Togashi 1 Yuji Hara Tomoko Tominaga Tomohiro Higashi Yasunobu Konishi Yasuo Mori Makoto Tominaga
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Section of Cell Signaling, Okazaki Institute for Integrative Bioscience, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Aichi, Japan.
Abstract

There are eight thermosensitive TRP (transient receptor potential) channels in mammals, and there might be Other TRP channels sensitive to temperature stimuli. Here, we demonstrate that TRPM2 can be activated by exposure to warm temperatures (>35 degrees C) apparently via direct heat-evoked channel gating. beta-NAD(+)- or ADP-ribose-evoked TRPM2 activity is robustly potentiated at elevated temperatures. We also show that, even though cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) does not activate TRPM2 at 25 degrees C, co-application of heat and intracellular cADPR dramatically potentiates TRPM2 activity. Heat and cADPR evoke similar responses in rat insulinoma RIN-5F cells, which express TRPM2 endogenously. In pancreatic islets, TRPM2 is coexpressed with Insulin, and mild heating of these cells evokes increases in both cytosolic CA(2+) and Insulin release, which is K(ATP) channel-independent and protein kinase A-mediated. Heat-evoked responses in both RIN-5F cells and pancreatic islets are significantly diminished by treatment with TRPM2-specific siRNA. These results identify TRPM2 as a potential molecular target for cADPR, and suggest that TRPM2 regulates CA(2+) entry into pancreatic beta-cells at body temperature depending on the production of cADPR-related molecules, thereby regulating Insulin secretion.

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