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      Scinderin-derived actin-binding peptides inhibit Ca(2+)- and GTPgammaS-dependent exocytosis in mouse pancreatic beta-cells.

      European Journal of Pharmacology
      Animals, Calcium, antagonists & inhibitors, Cells, Cultured, Exocytosis, drug effects, Gelsolin, Guanosine 5'-O-(3-Thiotriphosphate), Insulin, secretion, Islets of Langerhans, Mice, Microfilament Proteins, chemistry, pharmacology, Patch-Clamp Techniques

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          Abstract

          Using capacitance measurements, we have explored the effects of three different scinderin actin-binding peptides (Sc(77-89); Sc(138-146); Sc(511-523)) on Ca(2+)- and GTPgammaS-induced exocytosis in single mouse pancreatic beta-cells. Sc(77-89) (10 microM) reduced exocytosis by 43% in whole-cell experiments in which secretion was triggered by intracellular dialysis with a Ca(2+)-EGTA buffer with a free Ca(2+) concentration of 2 microM. A more pronounced reduction of the rate of exocytosis was observed with Sc(138-146) (72%) but not with Sc(511-523) (39%). Sc(138-146) also reduced depolarisation-induced exocytosis by 61% without affecting the whole-cell Ca(2+) current. When exocytosis was triggered by infusion of GTPgammaS, all scinderin-binding peptides reduced exocytosis by 59-75%. These data suggest that scinderin might be important for controlling cortical actin network dynamics in mouse pancreatic beta-cells and that scinderin-induced cortical filamentous actin disassembly is required for insulin secretion.

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