4.8 Article

The cephalic phase of insulin release is modulated by IL-10

Journal

CELL METABOLISM
Volume 34, Issue 7, Pages 991-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2022.06.001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Margot und Erich Goldschmidt & Peter Rene' Jacobson-Stiftung
  2. alumni of the medical faculty of the University of Basel
  3. Swiss National Research Foundation

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This study reveals that the initial cephalic phase of insulin secretion is mediated through the vagus nerve and IL-10 is involved in this process. IL-10 stimulates postprandial insulin secretion through neuronal transmission and is produced by microglia. It activates the vagus nerve and regulates hypothalamic activity. Impaired IL-10 signaling contributes to the dysregulation of cephalic phase insulin release in obesity.
The initial cephalic phase of insulin secretion is mediated through the vagus nerve and is not due to glycemic stimulation of pancreatic 0 cells. Recently, IL-10 was shown to stimulate postprandial insulin secretion. Here, we describe that this incretin-like effect of IL-10 involves neuronal transmission. Furthermore, we found that cephalic phase insulin release was mediated by IL-10 originating from microglia. Moreover, IL-10 activated the vagus nerve to induce insulin secretion and regulated the activity of the hypothalamus in response to ce-phalic stimulation. Notably, cephalic phase insulin release was impaired in obesity, in both mice and humans, and in mice, this was due to dysregulated IL-10 signaling. Our findings attribute a regulatory role to IL-10 in the integration of nutrient-derived sensory information, subsequent neuronally mediated insulin secretion, and the dysregulation of autonomic cephalic phase responses in obesity.

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