Aims/hypothesis
Increased lipid supply causes beta cell death, which may contribute to reduced beta cell mass in type 2 diabetes. We investigated
whether endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress is necessary for lipid-induced apoptosis in beta cells and also whether ER stress
is present in islets of an animal model of diabetes and of humans with type 2 diabetes.
Methods
Expression of genes involved in ER stress was evaluated in insulin-secreting MIN6 cells exposed to elevated lipids, in islets
isolated from db/db mice and in pancreas sections of humans with type 2 diabetes. Overproduction of the ER chaperone heat shock 70 kDa protein
5 (HSPA5, previously known as immunoglobulin heavy chain binding protein [BIP]) was performed to assess whether attenuation
of ER stress affected lipid-induced apoptosis.
Results
We demonstrated that the pro-apoptotic fatty acid palmitate triggers a comprehensive ER stress response in MIN6 cells, which
was virtually absent using non-apoptotic fatty acid oleate. Time-dependent increases in mRNA levels for activating transcription
factor 4 (Atf4), DNA-damage inducible transcript 3 (Ddit3, previously known as C/EBP homologous protein [Chop]) and DnaJ homologue (HSP40) C3 (Dnajc3, previously known as p58) correlated with increased apoptosis in palmitate- but not in oleate-treated MIN6 cells. Attenuation of ER stress by overproduction
of HSPA5 in MIN6 cells significantly protected against lipid-induced apoptosis. In islets of db/db mice, a variety of marker genes of ER stress were also upregulated. Increased processing (activation) of X-box binding protein
1 (Xbp1) mRNA was also observed, confirming the existence of ER stress. Finally, we observed increased islet protein production of
HSPA5, DDIT3, DNAJC3 and BCL2-associated X protein in human pancreas sections of type 2 diabetes subjects.
Conclusions/interpretation
Our results provide evidence that ER stress occurs in type 2 diabetes and is required for aspects of the underlying beta cell
failure.
Keywords Apoptosis - Endoplasmic reticulum stress - Fatty acids - Islets - Pancreatic beta cells - Type 2 diabetes
D. R. Laybutt and A. M. Preston have contributed equally to this work.