Pancreatic β-cell lipotoxicity induced by overexpression of hormone-sensitive lipase

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Abstract

Lipid perturbations associated with triglyceride overstorage in β-cells impair insulin secretion, a process termed lipotoxicity. To assess the role of hormone-sensitive lipase, which is expressed and enzymatically active in β-cells, in the development of lipotoxicity, we generated transgenic mice overexpressing hormone-sensitive lipase specifically in β-cells. Transgenic mice developed glucose intolerance and severely blunted glucose-stimulated insulin secretion when challenged with a high-fat diet. As expected, both lipase activity and forskolin-stimulated lipolysis was increased in transgenic compared with wild-type islets. This was reflected in significantly lower triglycerides levels in transgenic compared with wild-type islets in mice receiving the high-fat diet, whereas no difference in islet triglycerides was found between the two genotypes under low-fat diet conditions. Our results highlight the importance of mobilization of the islet triglyceride pool in the development of β-cell lipotoxicity. We propose that hormone-sensitive lipase is involved in mediating β-cell lipotoxicity by providing ligands for peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors and other lipid-activated transcription factors, which in turn alter the expression of critical genes. One such gene might be uncoupling protein-2, which was found to be upregulated in transgenic islets, a change that was accompanied by decreased ATP levels.

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Winzell, M. S., Svensson, H., Enerbäck, S., Ravnskjaer, K., Mandrup, S., Esser, V., … Holm, C. (2003). Pancreatic β-cell lipotoxicity induced by overexpression of hormone-sensitive lipase. Diabetes, 52(8), 2057–2065. https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.52.8.2057

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