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Publication : UCP2 regulates the glucagon response to fasting and starvation.

First Author  Allister EM Year  2013
Journal  Diabetes Volume  62
Issue  5 Pages  1623-33
PubMed ID  23434936 Mgi Jnum  J:208672
Mgi Id  MGI:5563899 Doi  10.2337/db12-0981
Citation  Allister EM, et al. (2013) UCP2 regulates the glucagon response to fasting and starvation. Diabetes 62(5):1623-33
abstractText  Glucagon is important for maintaining euglycemia during fasting/starvation, and abnormal glucagon secretion is associated with type 1 and type 2 diabetes; however, the mechanisms of hypoglycemia-induced glucagon secretion are poorly understood. We previously demonstrated that global deletion of mitochondrial uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2(-/-)) in mice impaired glucagon secretion from isolated islets. Therefore, UCP2 may contribute to the regulation of hypoglycemia-induced glucagon secretion, which is supported by our current finding that UCP2 expression is increased in nutrient-deprived murine and human islets. Further to this, we created alpha-cell-specific UCP2 knockout (UCP2AKO) mice, which we used to demonstrate that blood glucose recovery in response to hypoglycemia is impaired owing to attenuated glucagon secretion. UCP2-deleted alpha-cells have higher levels of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) due to enhanced mitochondrial coupling, which translated into defective stimulus/secretion coupling. The effects of UCP2 deletion were mimicked by the UCP2 inhibitor genipin on both murine and human islets and also by application of exogenous ROS, confirming that changes in oxidative status and electrical activity directly reduce glucagon secretion. Therefore, alpha-cell UCP2 deletion perturbs the fasting/hypoglycemic glucagon response and shows that UCP2 is necessary for normal alpha-cell glucose sensing and the maintenance of euglycemia.
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