figshare
Browse
kaup_a_1368596_sm9653.pdf (16.8 MB)

Intermittent fasting preserves beta-cell mass in obesity-induced diabetes via the autophagy-lysosome pathway

Download (16.8 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2017-11-25, 15:57 authored by Haiyan Liu, Ali Javaheri, Rebecca J. Godar, John Murphy, Xiucui Ma, Nidhi Rohatgi, Jana Mahadevan, Krzysztof Hyrc, Paul Saftig, Connie Marshall, Michael L. McDaniel, Maria S. Remedi, Babak Razani, Fumihiko Urano, Abhinav Diwan

Obesity-induced diabetes is characterized by hyperglycemia, insulin resistance, and progressive beta cell failure. In islets of mice with obesity-induced diabetes, we observe increased beta cell death and impaired autophagic flux. We hypothesized that intermittent fasting, a clinically sustainable therapeutic strategy, stimulates autophagic flux to ameliorate obesity-induced diabetes. Our data show that despite continued high-fat intake, intermittent fasting restores autophagic flux in islets and improves glucose tolerance by enhancing glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, beta cell survival, and nuclear expression of NEUROG3, a marker of pancreatic regeneration. In contrast, intermittent fasting does not rescue beta-cell death or induce NEUROG3 expression in obese mice with lysosomal dysfunction secondary to deficiency of the lysosomal membrane protein, LAMP2 or haplo-insufficiency of BECN1/Beclin 1, a protein critical for autophagosome formation. Moreover, intermittent fasting is sufficient to provoke beta cell death in nonobese lamp2 null mice, attesting to a critical role for lysosome function in beta cell homeostasis under fasting conditions. Beta cells in intermittently-fasted LAMP2- or BECN1-deficient mice exhibit markers of autophagic failure with accumulation of damaged mitochondria and upregulation of oxidative stress. Thus, intermittent fasting preserves organelle quality via the autophagy-lysosome pathway to enhance beta cell survival and stimulates markers of regeneration in obesity-induced diabetes.

Funding

This study was supported by grants from National Institutes of Health (HL107594; and DRC, Grant No. P30 DK020579) and Department of Veterans Affairs (I01BX000448, 1I01BX001969) to A.D, from the NIH (R01 DK098584) to MSR; and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to P.S. AJ was supported by K08HL138262-01 and 5-T32-HL07081–40 from the NHLBI. We also acknowledge support from the NIH Shared Instrumentation Grant (S10 RR027552) for support through the Hope Center Neuroimaging Core; and support from the Electron Microscopy Core and Advanced Imaging and Tissue Analysis Core of the Digestive Disease Research Core Center (DDRCC) at Washington University School of Medicine.

History

Usage metrics

    Autophagy

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC