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Superoxide-mediated activation of uncoupling protein 2 causes pancreatic β cell dysfunction
Stefan Krauss, Chen-Yu Zhang, Luca Scorrano, Louise T. Dalgaard, Julie St-Pierre, Shane T. Grey, Bradford B. Lowell
Stefan Krauss, Chen-Yu Zhang, Luca Scorrano, Louise T. Dalgaard, Julie St-Pierre, Shane T. Grey, Bradford B. Lowell
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Article Metabolism

Superoxide-mediated activation of uncoupling protein 2 causes pancreatic β cell dysfunction

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Abstract

Failure to secrete adequate amounts of insulin in response to increasing concentrations of glucose is an important feature of type 2 diabetes. The mechanism for loss of glucose responsiveness is unknown. Uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2), by virtue of its mitochondrial proton leak activity and consequent negative effect on ATP production, impairs glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Of interest, it has recently been shown that superoxide, when added to isolated mitochondria, activates UCP2-mediated proton leak. Since obesity and chronic hyperglycemia increase mitochondrial superoxide production, as well as UCP2 expression in pancreatic β cells, a superoxide-UCP2 pathway could contribute importantly to obesity- and hyperglycemia-induced β cell dysfunction. This study demonstrates that endogenously produced mitochondrial superoxide activates UCP2-mediated proton leak, thus lowering ATP levels and impairing glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Furthermore, hyperglycemia- and obesity-induced loss of glucose responsiveness is prevented by reduction of mitochondrial superoxide production or gene knockout of UCP2. Importantly, reduction of superoxide has no beneficial effect in the absence of UCP2, and superoxide levels are increased further in the absence of UCP2, demonstrating that the adverse effects of superoxide on β cell glucose sensing are caused by activation of UCP2. Therefore, superoxide-mediated activation of UCP2 could play an important role in the pathogenesis of β cell dysfunction and type 2 diabetes.

Authors

Stefan Krauss, Chen-Yu Zhang, Luca Scorrano, Louise T. Dalgaard, Julie St-Pierre, Shane T. Grey, Bradford B. Lowell

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Figure 5

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Effects of hyperglycemia and obesity on β cell dysfunction in WT and UCP...
Effects of hyperglycemia and obesity on β cell dysfunction in WT and UCP2-deficient islets, with or without overexpression of MnSOD and GPX1. Pancreatic islets were isolated from WT (a) or UCP2 KO mice (b) and subjected to chronic incubations at low and high glucose. In a separate experiment, islets were isolated from ob/ob mice (c). Adenovirus-driven overexpression of MnSOD and GPX1 was used where indicated. Islets were incubated for a total of 72 hours and washed, and then insulin-secretion studies were performed using three different concentrations of glucose (5.5, 12.5, and 25 mM). Insulin- and DNA-content data are reported for reference in Table 1. Results are means ± SEM of three independent experiments (a and b) or five repeats of one representative experiment (c). *P < 0.05, higher glucose vs. lowest glucose condition in each group; #P < 0.05, basal secretion (chronic hyperglycemia) vs. basal secretion (5.5 mM glucose).

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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