Interleukin-6 regulates pancreatic α-cell mass expansion

Helga Ellingsgaard(University Hospital of Zurich), Jan A. Ehses(University Hospital of Zurich), Eva Hammar, Leentje Van Lommel(KU Leuven), Roel Quintens(KU Leuven), Geert A. Martens(Center for Beta Cell Therapy in Diabetes), Julie Kerr‐Conte(Inserm), François Pattou(Inserm), Thierry Berney, Daniël Pipeleers(Center for Beta Cell Therapy in Diabetes), Philippe A. Halban, Frans Schuit(KU Leuven), Marc Y. Donath(University Hospital of Zurich)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 22, 2008
Cited by 271Open Access
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Abstract

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is systemically elevated in obesity and is a predictive factor to develop type 2 diabetes. Pancreatic islet pathology in type 2 diabetes is characterized by reduced beta-cell function and mass, an increased proportion of alpha-cells relative to beta-cells, and alpha-cell dysfunction. Here we show that the alpha cell is a primary target of IL-6 actions. Beginning with investigating the tissue-specific expression pattern of the IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) in both mice and rats, we find the highest expression of the IL-6R in the endocrine pancreas, with highest expression on the alpha-cell. The islet IL-6R is functional, and IL-6 acutely regulates both pro-glucagon mRNA and glucagon secretion in mouse and human islets, with no acute effect on insulin secretion. Furthermore, IL-6 stimulates alpha-cell proliferation, prevents apoptosis due to metabolic stress, and regulates alpha-cell mass in vivo. Using IL-6 KO mice fed a high-fat diet, we find that IL-6 is necessary for high-fat diet-induced increased alpha-cell mass, an effect that occurs early in response to diet change. Further, after high-fat diet feeding, IL-6 KO mice without expansion of alpha-cell mass display decreased fasting glucagon levels. However, despite these alpha-cell effects, high-fat feeding of IL-6 KO mice results in increased fed glycemia due to impaired insulin secretion, with unchanged insulin sensitivity and similar body weights. Thus, we conclude that IL-6 is necessary for the expansion of pancreatic alpha-cell mass in response to high-fat diet feeding, and we suggest that this expansion may be needed for functional beta-cell compensation to increased metabolic demand.


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