EMBO J. 2017 Jun 21. pii: e201695347. doi: 10.15252/embj.201695347.
[Epub ahead of print]
Malenczyk K1,2, Girach F1, Szodorai E1, Storm P3, Segerstolpe Å4, Tortoriello G2, Schnell R5, Mulder J6, Romanov RA1,2, Borók E7, Piscitelli F8, Di Marzo V8, Szabó G9, Sandberg R4, Kubicek S10, Lubec G11, Hökfelt T2, Wagner L12, Groop L3, Harkany T13,2.
Abstract
Ca2+-sensor proteins are generally implicated in insulin release through SNARE interactions. Here, secretagogin, whose expression in human pancreatic islets correlates with their insulin content and the incidence of type 2 diabetes, is shown to orchestrate an unexpectedly distinct mechanism. Single-cell RNA-seq reveals retained expression of the TRP family members in β-cells from diabetic donors. Amongst these, pharmacological probing identifies Ca2+-permeable transient receptor potential vanilloid type 1 channels (TRPV1) as potent inducers of secretagogin expression through recruitment of Sp1 transcription factors. Accordingly, agonist stimulation of TRPV1s fails to rescue insulin release from pancreatic islets of glucose intolerant secretagogin knock-out(-/-) mice. However, instead of merely impinging on the SNARE machinery, reduced insulin availability in secretagogin-/- mice is due to β-cell loss, which is underpinned by the collapse of protein folding and deregulation of secretagogin-dependent USP9X deubiquitinase activity. Therefore, and considering the desensitization of TRPV1s in diabetic pancreata, a TRPV1-to-secretagogin regulatory axis seems critical to maintain the structural integrity and signal competence of β-cells.
© 2017 The Authors.
KEYWORDS:
Ca2+ signalling; diabetes; endocannabinoid; exocytosis; β‐cell
- PMID: 28637794
- DOI: 10.15252/embj.201695347