Abstract

The essential folding and maturation process of proinsulin in β-cells is largely uncharacterized. To analyze this process, we improved approaches to immunoblotting, metabolic labeling, and data analysis used to determine the proportion of monomers and non-monomers and changes in composition of proinsulin in cells. We found the natural occurrence of a large proportion of proinsulin in various non-monomer states, i.e., aggregates, in normal mouse and human β-cells and a striking increase in the proportion of proinsulin non-monomers in Ins2+/Akita mice in response to a mutation (C96Y) in the insulin 2 (Ins2) gene. Proinsulin emerges in monomer and abundant dual-fate non-monomer states during nascent protein synthesis and shows heavy and preferential ATP/redox-sensitive disposal among secretory proteins during early post-translational processes. These findings support the preservation of proinsulin's aggregation-prone nature and low relative folding rate that permits the plentiful production of non-monomer forms with incomplete folding. Thus, in normal mouse/human β-cells, proinsulin's integrated maturation and degradation processes maintain a balance of natively and non-natively folded states, i.e., proinsulin homeostasis (PIHO). Further analysis discovered the high susceptibility of PIHO to cellular energy and calcium changes, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and reductive/oxidative stress, and insults by thiol reagent and cytokine. These results expose a direct correlation between various extra-/intracellular influences and (a)typical integrations of proinsulin maturation and disposal processes. Overall, our findings demonstrated that the control of precursor maturation and disposal acts as an early regulative mechanism in normal insulin production, and its disorder is crucially linked to β-cell failure and diabetes pathogenesis.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic b-cell failure, which is central in the pathogenesis of diabetes, has been explained by autoimmune assault in type 1 diabetes (T1D) [1] and by glucolipotoxicity, amyloid deposition, insulin resistance, unfolded protein response (UPR), and endoplasmic reticular (ER) and/or oxidative stress in type 2 diabetes (T2D) [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]

  • Our findings demonstrated that the process of proinsulin maturation determines the rate and efficiency of insulin biosynthesis and led us to hypothesize a model of proinsulin homeostasis (PIHO) in b-cellfunction

  • We considered that monomer a likely represented the proinsulin with native conformation because of its general preponderance in normal islets (Fig. 1A) and cloned mouse b-cells (Fig. S1B) and its migration pattern that resembled that of human proinsulin markers

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic b-cell failure, which is central in the pathogenesis of diabetes, has been explained by autoimmune assault in type 1 diabetes (T1D) [1] and by glucolipotoxicity, amyloid deposition, insulin resistance, unfolded protein response (UPR), and endoplasmic reticular (ER) and/or oxidative stress in type 2 diabetes (T2D) [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14] It remains unclear whether there is an intrinsic process that is susceptible to these diabetesrelated influences and linked as well to b-cell dysfunction in all forms of diabetes. We have used our improved approaches to metabolic labeling and C-peptide immunoblotting to visualize proinsulin aggregates in normal islets [16,17] and applied them in this study to determine the natural occurrence of a significant proportion of proinsulin in normal b-cells as various non-monomer states. Our findings demonstrated that the process of proinsulin maturation determines the rate and efficiency of insulin biosynthesis and led us to hypothesize a model of PIHO in b-cell (dys)function

Results
Discussion
Materials and Methods
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