4.6 Article

Insulin secretory deficiency and glucose intolerance in Rab3A null mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 278, Issue 11, Pages 9715-9721

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M211352200

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Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [DK5061, DK47919] Funding Source: Medline

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Insulin secretory dysfunction of the pancreatic P-cell in type-2 diabetes is thought to be due to defective nutrient sensing and/or deficiencies in the mechanism of insulin exocytosis. Previous studies have indicated that the GTP-binding protein, Rab3A, plays a mechanistic role in insulin exocytosis. Here, we report that Rab3A(-/-) mice develop fasting hyperglycemia and upon a glucose challenge show significant glucose intolerance coupled to ablated first-phase insulin release and consequential insufficient insulin secretion in vivo, without insulin resistance. The in vivo insulin secretory response to arginine was similar in Rab3A(-/-) mice as Rab3A(+/+) control animals, indicating a phenotype reminiscent of insulin secretory dysfunction found in type-2 diabetes. However, when a second arginine dose was given 10 min after, there was a negligible insulin secretory response in Rab3A-/- mice, compared with that in Rab3A(+/+) animals, that was markedly increased above that to the first arginine stimulus. There was no difference in beta-cell mass or insulin production between Rab3A-/- and Rab3A(+/+) mice. However, in isolated islets, secretagogue-induced insulin release (by glucose, GLP-1, glyburide, or fatty acid) was similar to60-70% lower in Rab3A(-/-) islets compared with Rab3A(+/+) controls. Nonetheless, there was a similar rate of glucose oxidation and glucose-induced rise in cytosolic [Ca2+](i) flux between Rab3A(-/-) and Rab3A(+/+) islet beta-cells, indicating the mechanistic role of Rab3A lies downstream of generating secondary signals that trigger insulin release, at the level of secretory granule transport and/or exocytosis. Thus, Rab3A plays an important in vivo role facilitating the efficiency of insulin exocytosis, most likely at the level of replenishing the ready releasable pool of P-granules. Also, this study indicates, for the first time, that the in vivo insulin secretory dysfunction found in type-2 diabetes can lie solely at the level of defective insulin exocytosis.

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