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Publication : Deletion of Protein Kinase D1 in Pancreatic β-Cells Impairs Insulin Secretion in High-Fat Diet-Fed Mice.

First Author  Bergeron V Year  2018
Journal  Diabetes Volume  67
Issue  1 Pages  71-77
PubMed ID  29038309 Mgi Jnum  J:255151
Mgi Id  MGI:6112889 Doi  10.2337/db17-0982
Citation  Bergeron V, et al. (2018) Deletion of Protein Kinase D1 in Pancreatic beta-Cells Impairs Insulin Secretion in High-Fat Diet-Fed Mice. Diabetes 67(1):71-77
abstractText  Betabeta-Cell adaptation to insulin resistance is necessary to maintain glucose homeostasis in obesity. Failure of this mechanism is a hallmark of type 2 diabetes (T2D). Hence, factors controlling functional beta-cell compensation are potentially important targets for the treatment of T2D. Protein kinase D1 (PKD1) integrates diverse signals in the beta-cell and plays a critical role in the control of insulin secretion. However, the role of beta-cell PKD1 in glucose homeostasis in vivo is essentially unknown. Using beta-cell-specific, inducible PKD1 knockout mice (betaPKD1KO), we examined the role of beta-cell PKD1 under basal conditions and during high-fat feeding. betaPKD1KO mice under a chow diet presented no significant difference in glucose tolerance or insulin secretion compared with mice expressing the Cre transgene alone; however, when compared with wild-type mice, both groups developed glucose intolerance. Under a high-fat diet, deletion of PKD1 in beta-cells worsened hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, and glucose intolerance. This was accompanied by impaired glucose-induced insulin secretion both in vivo in hyperglycemic clamps and ex vivo in isolated islets from high-fat diet-fed betaPKD1KO mice without changes in islet mass. This study demonstrates an essential role for PKD1 in the beta-cell adaptive secretory response to high-fat feeding in mice.
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