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

Haiyan Liu(John Cochran VA Medical Center), Ali Javaheri(Washington University in St. Louis), Rebecca J. Godar(Washington University in St. Louis), John T. Murphy(Washington University in St. Louis), Xiucui Ma(Washington University in St. Louis), Nidhi Rohatgi(Washington University in St. Louis), Jana Mahadevan(Washington University in St. Louis), Krzysztof Hyrc(Washington University in St. Louis), Paul Säftig(Kiel University), Connie A. Marshall(Washington University in St. Louis), Michael L. McDaniel(Washington University in St. Louis), Marı́a S. Remedi(Washington University in St. Louis), Babak Razani(Washington University in St. Louis), Fumihiko Urano(Washington University in St. Louis), Abhinav Diwan(Washington University in St. Louis)
Autophagy
August 30, 2017
Cited by 189Open Access
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Abstract

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.


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