Mitophagy protects β cells from inflammatory damage in diabetes

Inflammatory damage contributes to β cell failure in type 1 and 2 diabetes (T1D and T2D, respectively). Mitochondria are damaged by inflammatory signaling in β cells, resulting in impaired bioenergetics and initiation of proapoptotic machinery. Hence, the identification of protective responses to in...

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Veröffentlicht in:JCI insight 2020-12, Vol.5 (24)
Hauptverfasser: Sidarala, Vaibhav, Pearson, Gemma L, Parekh, Vishal S, Thompson, Benjamin, Christen, Lisa, Gingerich, Morgan A, Zhu, Jie, Stromer, Tracy, Ren, Jianhua, Reck, Emma C, Chai, Biaoxin, Corbett, John A, Mandrup-Poulsen, Thomas, Satin, Leslie S, Soleimanpour, Scott A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Inflammatory damage contributes to β cell failure in type 1 and 2 diabetes (T1D and T2D, respectively). Mitochondria are damaged by inflammatory signaling in β cells, resulting in impaired bioenergetics and initiation of proapoptotic machinery. Hence, the identification of protective responses to inflammation could lead to new therapeutic targets. Here, we report that mitophagy serves as a protective response to inflammatory stress in both human and rodent β cells. Utilizing in vivo mitophagy reporters, we observed that diabetogenic proinflammatory cytokines induced mitophagy in response to nitrosative/oxidative mitochondrial damage. Mitophagy-deficient β cells were sensitized to inflammatory stress, leading to the accumulation of fragmented dysfunctional mitochondria, increased β cell death, and hyperglycemia. Overexpression of CLEC16A, a T1D gene and mitophagy regulator whose expression in islets is protective against T1D, ameliorated cytokine-induced human β cell apoptosis. Thus, mitophagy promotes β cell survival and prevents diabetes by countering inflammatory injury. Targeting this pathway has the potential to prevent β cell failure in diabetes and may be beneficial in other inflammatory conditions.
ISSN:2379-3708
2379-3708
DOI:10.1172/jci.insight.141138