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Pancreatic β-Cell Adaptive Plasticity in Obesity Increases Insulin Production but Adversely Affects Secretory Function
Author(s) -
Cristina Alarcón,
Brandon B. Boland,
Yuji Uchizono,
Patrick C. Moore,
Bryan Peterson,
Suryalekha Rajan,
Olivia S. Rhodes,
Andrew B. Noske,
Leena Haataja,
Peter Arvan,
Bradly J. Marsh,
Jotham R. Austin,
Christopher J. Rhodes
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
diabetes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.219
H-Index - 330
eISSN - 1939-327X
pISSN - 0012-1797
DOI - 10.2337/db15-0792
Subject(s) - proinsulin , endoplasmic reticulum , insulin , endocrinology , medicine , golgi apparatus , biology , diabetes mellitus , secretion , unfolded protein response , homeostasis , microbiology and biotechnology
Pancreatic β-cells normally produce adequate insulin to control glucose homeostasis, but in obesity-related diabetes, there is a presumed deficit in insulin production and secretory capacity. In this study, insulin production was assessed directly in obese diabetic mouse models, and proinsulin biosynthesis was found to be contrastingly increased, coupled with a significant expansion of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (without endoplasmic reticulum stress) and Golgi apparatus, increased vesicular trafficking, and a depletion of mature β-granules. As such, β-cells have a remarkable capacity to produce substantial quantities of insulin in obesity, which are then made available for immediate secretion to meet increased metabolic demand, but this comes at the price of insulin secretory dysfunction. Notwithstanding, it can be restored. Upon exposing isolated pancreatic islets of obese mice to normal glucose concentrations, β-cells revert back to their typical morphology with restoration of regulated insulin secretion. These data demonstrate an unrealized dynamic adaptive plasticity of pancreatic β-cells and underscore the rationale for transient β-cell rest as a treatment strategy for obesity-linked diabetes.

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