Genetic Reduction of Glucose Metabolism Preserves Functional β-Cell Mass in KATP-Induced Neonatal Diabetes

Diabetes. 2022 Jun 1;71(6):1233-1245. doi: 10.2337/db21-0992.

Abstract

β-Cell failure and loss of β-cell mass are key events in diabetes progression. Although insulin hypersecretion in early stages has been implicated in β-cell exhaustion/failure, loss of β-cell mass still occurs in KATP gain-of-function (GOF) mouse models of human neonatal diabetes in the absence of insulin secretion. Thus, we hypothesize that hyperglycemia-induced increased β-cell metabolism is responsible for β-cell failure and that reducing glucose metabolism will prevent loss of β-cell mass. To test this, KATP-GOF mice were crossed with mice carrying β-cell-specific glucokinase haploinsufficiency (GCK+/-), to genetically reduce glucose metabolism. As expected, both KATP-GOF and KATP-GOF/GCK+/- mice showed lack of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. However, KATP-GOF/GCK+/- mice demonstrated markedly reduced blood glucose, delayed diabetes progression, and improved glucose tolerance compared with KATP-GOF mice. In addition, decreased plasma insulin and content, increased proinsulin, and augmented plasma glucagon observed in KATP-GOF mice were normalized to control levels in KATP-GOF/GCK+/- mice. Strikingly, KATP-GOF/GCK+/- mice demonstrated preserved β-cell mass and identity compared with the marked decrease in β-cell identity and increased dedifferentiation observed in KATP-GOF mice. Moreover KATP-GOF/GCK+/- mice demonstrated restoration of body weight and liver and brown/white adipose tissue mass and function and normalization of physical activity and metabolic efficiency compared with KATP-GOF mice. These results demonstrate that decreasing β-cell glucose signaling can prevent glucotoxicity-induced loss of insulin content and β-cell failure independently of compensatory insulin hypersecretion and β-cell exhaustion.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Diabetes Mellitus* / metabolism
  • Glucokinase / genetics
  • Glucokinase / metabolism
  • Glucose / metabolism
  • Insulin / metabolism
  • Insulin-Secreting Cells* / metabolism
  • Mice
  • Mice, Transgenic

Substances

  • Insulin
  • Glucokinase
  • Glucose