[HTML][HTML] Protein markers for insulin-producing beta cells with higher glucose sensitivity

GA Martens, L Jiang, K Verhaeghen, JB Connolly… - PLoS …, 2010 - journals.plos.org
GA Martens, L Jiang, K Verhaeghen, JB Connolly, SG Geromanos, G Stange…
PLoS One, 2010journals.plos.org
Background and Methodology Pancreatic beta cells show intercellular differences in their
metabolic glucose sensitivity and associated activation of insulin production. To identify
protein markers for these variations in functional glucose sensitivity, rat beta cell
subpopulations were flow-sorted for their level of glucose-induced NAD (P) H and their
proteomes were quantified by label-free data independent alternate scanning LC-MS. Beta
cell-selective proteins were also identified through comparison with rat brain and liver tissue …
Background and Methodology
Pancreatic beta cells show intercellular differences in their metabolic glucose sensitivity and associated activation of insulin production. To identify protein markers for these variations in functional glucose sensitivity, rat beta cell subpopulations were flow-sorted for their level of glucose-induced NAD(P)H and their proteomes were quantified by label-free data independent alternate scanning LC-MS. Beta cell-selective proteins were also identified through comparison with rat brain and liver tissue and with purified islet alpha cells, after geometrical normalization using 6 stably expressed reference proteins.
Principal Findings
All tissues combined, 943 proteins were reliably quantified. In beta cells, 93 out of 467 quantifiable proteins were uniquely detected in this cell type; several other proteins presented a high molar abundance in beta cells. The proteome of the beta cell subpopulation with high metabolic and biosynthetic responsiveness to 7.5 mM glucose was characterized by (i) an on average 50% higher expression of protein biosynthesis regulators such as 40S and 60S ribosomal constituents, NADPH-dependent protein folding factors and translation elongation factors; (ii) 50% higher levels of enzymes involved in glycolysis and in the cytosolic arm of the malate/aspartate-NADH-shuttle. No differences were noticed in mitochondrial enzymes of the Krebs cycle, beta-oxidation or respiratory chain.
Conclusions
Quantification of subtle variations in the proteome using alternate scanning LC-MS shows that beta cell metabolic glucose responsiveness is mostly associated with higher levels of glycolytic but not of mitochondrial enzymes.
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