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Publication : Autophagy Differentially Regulates Insulin Production and Insulin Sensitivity.

First Author  Yamamoto S Year  2018
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  23
Issue  11 Pages  3286-3299
PubMed ID  29898399 Mgi Jnum  J:271108
Mgi Id  MGI:6278431 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2018.05.032
Citation  Yamamoto S, et al. (2018) Autophagy Differentially Regulates Insulin Production and Insulin Sensitivity. Cell Rep 23(11):3286-3299
abstractText  Autophagy, a stress-induced lysosomal degradative pathway, has been assumed to exert similar metabolic effects in different organs. Here, we establish a model where autophagy plays different roles in insulin-producing beta cells versus insulin-responsive cells, utilizing knockin (Becn1(F121A)) mice manifesting constitutively active autophagy. With a high-fat-diet challenge, the autophagy-hyperactive mice unexpectedly show impaired glucose tolerance, but improved insulin sensitivity, compared to mice with normal autophagy. Autophagy hyperactivation enhances insulin signaling, via suppressing ER stress in insulin-responsive cells, but decreases insulin secretion by selectively sequestrating and degrading insulin granule vesicles in beta cells, a process we term "vesicophagy." The reduction in insulin storage, insulin secretion, and glucose tolerance is reversed by transient treatment of autophagy inhibitors. Thus, beta cells and insulin-responsive tissues require different autophagy levels for optimal function. To improve insulin sensitivity without hampering secretion, acute or intermittent, rather than chronic, activation of autophagy should be considered in diabetic therapy development.
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