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Nutrient regulation of insulin secretion: implications for hyperinsulinemia

Pancreatic beta-cells regulate blood glucose by secreting insulin in response to nutrients. The development of Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) is characterized by elevated insulin secretion in the fasted state and a failure to adequately respond to nutrient influx, particularly glucose. Current dogma states that insulin resistance is the initiating event in the development of T2D, with compensation by beta-cells necessary to maintain glucose homeostasis. An alternative model, which will be a central theme throughout this thesis, is that hypersecretion of insulin is the initiating and sustaining event in the development of T2D.
The underlying cause of insulin hypersecretion is unclear. Determining this is important in order to test this alternative model as a viable target for prevention and treatment of T2D. Because of the association between obesity and hyperinsulinemia, we hypothesized that exposure of the β-cell to high levels of nutrients stimulates insulin hypersecretion. We found that chronic incubation of β-cells in high glucose and/or oleate, which mimics nutrient conditions in obesity, lowered the half-maximal response for glucose to stimulate insulin secretion. The degree of the left-shift correlated with lipid stores. We determined that heightened sensitivity of granule exocytosis to Ca2+ was driving this left-shift. Thus glucose, while not necessarily abnormal in obesity, may cause hypersecretion of insulin due to altered sensitivity of the β-cell to this secretagogue. Iron stores are increased in obesity and are predictive of T2D development. We found that iron acutely stimulated both basal and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) in a reactive oxygen species dependent manner. Interestingly, iron did not increase insulin secretion via Ca2+ influx. Thus, both iron and glucose/oleate induce insulin hypersecretion via an aspect of the triggering pathway that is not Ca2+, the putative triggering signal. Previous work in our laboratory documented that exogenous mono-oleoyl-glycerol, an endogenous lipid signaling molecule and food additive, increases basal insulin secretion. We found that inhibition of monoacylglycerol lipase, which increases cellular monacylglycerol species, reduced GSIS, possibly via a reduction in long-chain CoA. Collectively, our works supports the hypothesis that chronic exposure to high nutrient levels drives insulin hypersecretion in obesity. / 2018-06-15T00:00:00Z

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/16726
Date15 June 2016
CreatorsErion, Karel Arnt
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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