posted on 2023-09-27, 21:29authored byFirdos, Aditya Mittal
Altered secretion
of insulin from pancreatic β-cells can
manifest into disorders. For example, a lack of endogenously produced
and/or secreted insulin results in Type 1 diabetes (and other associated
subtypes). Pancreatic β-cells are the endocrine secretory cells
that promote insulin secretion in response to glucose stimulation.
Secretion in response to extracellular triggers is an interplay among
various signaling pathways, transcription factors, and molecular mechanisms.
The Mouse Insulinoma 6 (MIN6) cell line serves as a model system for
gaining mechanistic insights into pancreatic β-cell functions.
It is obvious that higher glucose consumption and increased insulin
secretion are correlated. However, it has been reported that intracellular
ATP levels remain ∼ constant beyond the extracellular glucose
(EG) concentration of 10 mM. Therefore, any cause–effect relationship
between glucose consumption (GC) and enhanced insulin secretion (eIS)
remains unclear. We also found that total cellular protein, as well
as total protein content in the culture “supernatant,”
remains constant regardless of varying EG concentrations. This indicated
that eIS may be at the cost of (a) intracellular synthesis of other
proteins and (b) secretion of other secretory proteins, or both (a)
and (b), somehow coupled with GC by cells. To gain insights into the
above, we carried out a transcriptome study of MIN6 cells exposed
to hypoglycemic (HoG = 2.8 mM EG) and hyperglycemic (HyG = 25 mM EG)
conditions. Expression of transcripts was analyzed in terms of Fragments
Per Kilobase of transcript per Million mapped reads and Transcripts
Per Million (FPKM and TPM) as well as values obtained by normalizing
w.r.t. “∑(FPKM)” and “∑(TPM).”
We report that HyG extracellular conditions lead to an ∼2-fold
increase in insulin secretion compared to HoG measured by the enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and transcripts of secreted proteins as
well as their isoforms decreased in HyG conditions compared to HoG.
Our results show for the first time that eIS in HyG conditions is
at the cost of reduced transcription of other secreted proteins and
is coupled with higher GC. The higher GC at increased extracellular
glucose also indicates a yet undiscovered role of glucose molecules
enhancing insulin secretion, since ATP levels resulting from glucose
metabolism have been reported to be constant above an EG concentration
of 10 mM. While extrapolation of our results to clinical implications
is ambitious at best, this work reports novel cellular level aspects
that seem relevant in some clinical observations pertaining to Type
1 diabetes. In addition, the conservatory nature of cellular secretions
in insulin-secreting cells, discovered here, may be a general feature
in cell biology.