Type 2 diabetes results from severe insulin resistance coupled with a failure of β cells to compensate by secreting sufficient
insulin. Multiple genetic loci are involved in the development of diabetes, although the effect of each gene on diabetes susceptibility
is thought to be small. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are noncoding 19–22-nucleotide RNA molecules that potentially regulate the expression
of thousands of genes. To understand the relationship between miRNA regulation and obesity-induced diabetes, we quantitatively
profiled approximately 220 miRNAs in pancreatic islets, adipose tissue, and liver from diabetes-resistant (B6) and diabetes-susceptible
(BTBR) mice. More than half of the miRNAs profiled were expressed in all three tissues, with many miRNAs in each tissue showing
significant changes in response to genetic obesity. Furthermore, several miRNAs in each tissue were differentially responsive
to obesity in B6 versus BTBR mice, suggesting that they may be involved in the pathogenesis of diabetes. In liver there were
approximately 40 miRNAs that were downregulated in response to obesity in B6 but not BTBR mice, indicating that genetic differences
between the mouse strains play a critical role in miRNA regulation. In order to elucidate the genetic architecture of hepatic
miRNA expression, we measured the expression of miRNAs in genetically obese F2 mice. Approximately 10% of the miRNAs measured
showed significant linkage (miR-eQTLs), identifying loci that control miRNA abundance. Understanding the influence that obesity
and genetics exert on the regulation of miRNA expression will reveal the role miRNAs play in the context of obesity-induced
type 2 diabetes.