Abstract

Loss of pancreatic β-cell mass and function as a result of sustained ER stress is a core step in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus type 2. The complex control of β-cells and insulin production involves hedgehog (Hh) signaling pathways as well as cholesterol-mediated effects. In fact, data from studies in humans and animal models suggest that HDL protects against the development of diabetes through inhibition of ER stress and β-cell apoptosis. We investigated the mechanism by which HDL inhibits ER stress and apoptosis induced by thapsigargin, a sarco/ER Ca2+-ATPase inhibitor, in β-cells of a rat insulinoma cell line, INS1e. We further explored effects on the Hh signaling receptor Smoothened (SMO) with pharmacologic agonists and inhibitors. Interference with sterol synthesis or efflux enhanced β-cell apoptosis and abrogated the anti-apoptotic activity of HDL. During ER stress, HDL facilitated the efflux of specific oxysterols, including 24-hydroxycholesterol (OHC). Supplementation of reconstituted HDL with 24-OHC enhanced and, in cells lacking ABCG1 or the 24-OHC synthesizing enzyme CYP46A1, restored the protective activity of HDL. Inhibition of SMO countered the beneficial effects of HDL and also LDL, and SMO agonists decreased β-cell apoptosis in the absence of ABCG1 or CYP46A1. The translocation of the SMO-activated transcription factor glioma-associated oncogene GLI-1 was inhibited by ER stress but restored by both HDL and 24-OHC. In conclusion, the protective effect of HDL to counter ER stress and β-cell death involves the transport, generation, and mobilization of oxysterols for activation of the Hh signaling receptor SMO.

Highlights

  • Loss of pancreatic -cell mass and function as a result of sustained ER stress is a core step in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus type 2

  • By using the rat insulinoma cell line INS1e, we show that the cytoprotective effect of HDL in -cells involves the generation and efflux of specific oxysterols by cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes and ABC transporters, respectively, and the subsequent activation of SMO by these oxysterols to elicit the nuclear translocation of its downstream target, namely, glioma-associated oncogene (GLI-1), a member of the zinc-finger protein family [25]

  • We tested the ability of HDL to inhibit the apoptosis of INS1e cells as induced by TG that was previously shown to induce ER stress and apoptosis in mouse insulinoma 6 (Min6) cells and human islets [7, 23]

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Summary

Introduction

Loss of pancreatic -cell mass and function as a result of sustained ER stress is a core step in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus type 2. Inhibition of SMO countered the beneficial effects of HDL and LDL, and SMO agonists decreased -cell apoptosis in the absence of ABCG1 or CYP46A1. The protective effect of HDL to counter ER stress and -cell death involves the transport, generation, and mobilization of oxysterols for activation of the Hh signaling receptor SMO—Yalcinkaya, M., A. HDL inhibits endoplasmic reticulum stress-induced apoptosis of pancreatic -cells in vitro by activation of Smoothened. The underlying mechanisms and receptors are unknown They could help to explain the inverse association between plasma HDL-cholesterol and the risk of incident diabetes, which was observed in both epidemiological and genetic studies [8, 9] as well as the opposite modulation of glucose tolerance in.

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