Abstract

Autophagy is the major mechanism involved in degradation and recycling of intracellular components, and its alterations have been proposed to cause beta cell dysfunction. In this study, we explored the effects of autophagy modulation in human islets under conditions associated to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. Human pancreatic islets were isolated by enzymatic digestion and density gradient purification from pancreatic samples of non-diabetic (ND; n = 17; age 65 ± 21 years; gender: 5 M/12 F; BMI 23.4 ± 3.3 kg/m2) and T2D (n = 9; age 76 ± 6 years; 4 M/5 F; gender: BMI 25.4 ± 3.7 kg/m2) organ donors. Nine ND organ donors were treated for hypertension and 1 for both hypertension and hypercholesterolemia. T2D organ donors were treated with metformin (1), oral hypoglycemic agents (2), diet + oral hypoglycemic agents (3), insulin (3) or insulin plus metformin (3) as for antidiabetic therapy and, of these, 3 were treated also for hypertension and 6 for both hypertension and hypercholesterolemia. Two days after isolation, they were cultured for 1–5 days with 10 ng/ml rapamycin (autophagy inducer), 5 mM 3-methyladenine or 1.0 nM concanamycin-A (autophagy blockers), either in the presence or not of metabolic (0.5 mM palmitate) or chemical (0.1 ng/ml brefeldin A) ER stressors. In ND islets palmitate exposure induced a 4 to 5-fold increase of beta cell apoptosis, which was significantly prevented by rapamycin and exacerbated by 3-MA. Similar results were observed with brefeldin treatment. Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from ND islets was reduced by palmitate (−40 to 50%) and brefeldin (−60 to 70%), and rapamycin counteracted palmitate, but not brefeldin, cytotoxic actions. Both palmitate and brefeldin induced PERK, CHOP and BiP gene expression, which was partially, but significantly prevented by rapamycin. With T2D islets, rapamycin alone reduced the amount of p62, an autophagy receptor that accumulates in cells when macroautophagy is inhibited. Compared to untreated T2D cells, rapamycin-exposed diabetic islets showed improved insulin secretion, reduced proportion of beta cells showing signs of apoptosis and better preserved insulin granules, mitochondria and ER ultrastructure; this was associated with significant reduction of PERK, CHOP and BiP gene expression. This study emphasizes the importance of autophagy modulation in human beta cell function and survival, particularly in situations of ER stress. Tuning autophagy could be a tool for beta cell protection.

Highlights

  • Autophagy represents a highly conserved intracellular recycling pathway by which cellular components are degraded through the lysosomal machinery [3]

  • The deleterious effects of both ER stressors were prevented by rapamycin, whereas 3-MA, but not concanamycin, enhanced the rate of beta cell apoptosis in presence of palmitate (Figures 1A,B)

  • Several physiological and pathological conditions are able to impair these processes leading to ER stress, and in the last years a large body of evidences has been provided indicating that ER stress may be implicated in beta cell dysfunction and death in diabetes [22, 23, 35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42]

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Summary

Introduction

Autophagy represents a highly conserved intracellular recycling pathway by which cellular components are degraded through the lysosomal machinery [3]. Autophagy can be viewed as a mechanism to protect cells against several stressors as well as a cellular response to wear-and-tear processes [5]. It has been demonstrated that dysregulated activation of autophagy can induce different types of cell death [6]. It seems that autophagy can either protect or promote cell death in relation to the cellular and environmental context [7]. Altered autophagy could play a key pathogenic role in several disease processes, especially where the accumulation of damaged molecules and organelles might elicit a condition of increased cellular stress [8]

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