β-Cell Control of Insulin Production During Starvation-Refeeding in Male Rats
Author(s) -
Brandon B. Boland,
Charles L. Brown,
Cristina Alarcón,
Damien Demozay,
Joseph Grimsby,
Christopher J. Rhodes
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.674
H-Index - 257
eISSN - 1945-7170
pISSN - 0013-7227
DOI - 10.1210/en.2017-03120
Subject(s) - insulin , medicine , endocrinology , proinsulin , insulin oscillation , biology , anabolism , catabolism , glucagon , downregulation and upregulation , hormone , metabolism , islet , biochemistry , gene
Mammalian metabolism has evolved to adapt to changes in nutrient status. Insulin, the key anabolic hormone, facilitates intracellular storage of nutrient fuels and plays a pivotal role in the transition away from catabolism upon refeeding. Although circulating insulin relative to nutrient levels has been well characterized during fasting and refeeding, how pancreatic β-cell biology caters to acute changes in insulin demand has not been sufficiently addressed. Here, we examined the dynamics of (pro)insulin production and associated changes in β-cell ultrastructure during refeeding after a 72-hour fast in male rats. We found that fasted β-cells had marked degranulation, which inversely coordinated with the upregulation of autophagolysomal and lysosomal organelles. There was also expanded Golgi that correlated with enhanced (pro)insulin biosynthetic capacity but, conversely, blunted in vivo insulin secretion. Within 4 to 6 hours of refeeding, proinsulin biosynthesis, cellular ultrastructure, in vivo insulin secretion, and glucose tolerance normalized to levels near those of fed control animals, indicating a rapid replenishment of normal insulin secretory capacity. Thus, during a prolonged fast, the β-cell protects against hypoglycemia by markedly reducing insulin secretory capacity in vivo but is simultaneously poised to efficiently increase (pro)insulin production upon refeeding to effectively return normal insulin secretory capacity within hours.
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