Abstract

The onset of type 2 diabetes is characterized by transition from successful to failed insulin secretory compensation to obesity-related insulin resistance and dysmetabolism. Energy-rich diets in rodents are commonly studied models of compensatory increases in both insulin secretion and β cell mass. However, the mechanisms of these adaptive responses are incompletely understood, and it is also unclear why these responses eventually fail. We measured the temporal trends of glucose homeostasis, insulin secretion, β cell morphometry, and islet gene expression in C57BL/6NTac mice fed a 60% high-fat diet (HFD) or control diet for up to 16 weeks. A 2-fold increased hyperinsulinemia was maintained for the first 4 weeks of HFD feeding and then further increased through 16 weeks. β cell mass increased progressively starting at 4 weeks, principally through nonproliferative growth. Insulin sensitivity was not significantly perturbed until 11 weeks of HFD feeding. Over the first 8 weeks, we observed two distinct waves of increased expression of β cell functional and prodifferentiation genes. This was followed by activation of the unfolded protein response at 8 weeks and overt β cell endoplasmic reticulum stress at 12-16 weeks. In summary, β cell adaptation to an HFD in C57BL/6NTac mice entails early insulin hypersecretion and a robust growth phase along with hyperexpression of related genes that begin well before the onset of observed insulin resistance. However, continued HFD exposure results in cessation of gene hyperexpression, β cell functional failure, and endoplasmic reticulum stress. These data point to a complex but not sustainable integration of β cell-adaptive responses to nutrient overabundance, obesity development, and insulin resistance.

Highlights

  • The onset of type 2 diabetes is characterized by transition from successful to failed insulin secretory compensation to obesity-related insulin resistance and dysmetabolism

  • We identified phases of ␤ cell compensation that involved early hyperproliferation followed by activation of the Irs2-PI3K-Akt-FoxO1 pathway along with up-regulation of PPAR␥ and its ␤ cell gene targets Pdx1, pyruvate carboxylase (PC), and GIP receptor (Gipr) (18 –20)

  • Body mass was increased after 1 week of the high-fat diet (HFD) and continued to progressively increase to 50% above the chow-fed control mice by 16 weeks (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

The onset of type 2 diabetes is characterized by transition from successful to failed insulin secretory compensation to obesity-related insulin resistance and dysmetabolism. Continued HFD exposure results in cessation of gene hyperexpression, ␤ cell functional failure, and endoplasmic reticulum stress These data point to a complex but not sustainable integration of ␤ celladaptive responses to nutrient overabundance, obesity development, and insulin resistance. We subsequently showed transcriptional regulation of PPAR␥ by FoxO1 in ␤ cells [20], suggesting that the Irs2-PI3K-AktFoxO1-PPAR␥ pathway functions as a central regulatory mechanism of ␤ cell adaptation in response to Px. The aim of this study was to define the timing and nature of key molecular and physiological events that underlie ␤ cell compensation in a rodent model of diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance and to identify mechanisms associated with ␤ cell transition from functional compensation to failure. Studies mont; CT, cycle threshold; PC, pyruvate carboxylase; GIP, glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide

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