| Literature DB >> 28853981 |
Haiyan Liu1,2, Ali Javaheri1, Rebecca J Godar1, John Murphy1, Xiucui Ma1,2, Nidhi Rohatgi3, Jana Mahadevan4, Krzysztof Hyrc5, Paul Saftig6, Connie Marshall3, Michael L McDaniel3, Maria S Remedi4, Babak Razani1, Fumihiko Urano4, Abhinav Diwan1,2,7.
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.Entities:
Keywords: autophagy; beta cells; diabetes; intermittent fasting; lysosomes
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28853981 PMCID: PMC5788488 DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2017.1368596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autophagy ISSN: 1554-8627 Impact factor: 16.016