- Ohara-Imaizumi, Mica;
- Kim, Hail;
- Yoshida, Masashi;
- Fujiwara, Tomonori;
- Aoyagi, Kyota;
- Toyofuku, Yukiko;
- Nakamichi, Yoko;
- Nishiwaki, Chiyono;
- Okamura, Tadashi;
- Uchida, Toyoyoshi;
- Fujitani, Yoshio;
- Akagawa, Kimio;
- Kakei, Masafumi;
- Watada, Hirotaka;
- German, Michael S;
- Nagamatsu, Shinya
In preparation for the metabolic demands of pregnancy, β cells in the maternal pancreatic islets increase both in number and in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) per cell. Mechanisms have been proposed for the increased β cell mass, but not for the increased GSIS. Because serotonin production increases dramatically during pregnancy, we tested whether flux through the ionotropic 5-HT3 receptor (Htr3) affects GSIS during pregnancy. Pregnant Htr3a(-/-) mice exhibited impaired glucose tolerance despite normally increased β cell mass, and their islets lacked the increase in GSIS seen in islets from pregnant wild-type mice. Electrophysiological studies showed that activation of Htr3 decreased the resting membrane potential in β cells, which increased Ca(2+) uptake and insulin exocytosis in response to glucose. Thus, our data indicate that serotonin, acting in a paracrine/autocrine manner through Htr3, lowers the β cell threshold for glucose and plays an essential role in the increased GSIS of pregnancy.