Cholesterol accumulation and diabetes in pancreatic β-cell-specific SREBP-2 transgenic mice: A new model for lipotoxicity

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Abstract

To determine the role of cholesterol synthesis in pancreatic β-cells, a transgenic model of in vivo activation of sterol-regulatory element binding protein 2 (SREBP-2) specifically in β-cells (TgRIP-SREBP-2) was developed and analyzed. Expression of nuclear human SREBP-2 in β-cells resulted in severe diabetes as evidenced by greater than 5-fold elevations in glycohemoglobin compared with C57BL/6 controls. Diabetes in TgRIP-SREBP-2 mice was primarily due to defects in glucose- and potassium-stimulated insulin secretion as determined by glucose tolerance test. Isolated islets of TgSREBP-2 mice were fewer in number, smaller, deformed, and had decreased insulin content. SREBP-2-expressing islets also contained increased esterified cholesterol and unchanged triglycerides with reduced ATP levels. Consistently, these islets exhibited elevated expression of HMG-CoA synthase and reductase and LDL receptor, with suppression of endogenous SREBPs. Genes involved in β-cell differentiation, such as PDX1 and BETA2, were suppressed, explaining loss of β-cell mass, whereas IRS2 expression was not affected. These phenotypes were dependent on the transgene expression. Taken together, these results indicate that activation of SREBP-2 in β-cells caused severe diabetes by loss of β-cell mass with accumulation of cholesterol, providing a new lipotoxic model and a potential link of disturbed cholesterol metabolism to impairment of β-cell function. Copyright © 2008 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Ishikawa, M., Iwasaki, Y., Yatoh, S., Kato, T., Kumadaki, S., Inoue, N., … Shimano, H. (2008). Cholesterol accumulation and diabetes in pancreatic β-cell-specific SREBP-2 transgenic mice: A new model for lipotoxicity. Journal of Lipid Research, 49(12), 2524–2534. https://doi.org/10.1194/jlr.M800238-JLR200

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