Pacific Northwest Diabetes Research Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Nutrition, Department of Medicine, and.
JCI Insight. 2017 Dec 21;2(24):92854. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.92854.
Many theories have been advanced to better understand why β cell function and structure relentlessly deteriorate during the course of type 2 diabetes (T2D). These theories include inflammation, apoptosis, replication, neogenesis, autophagy, differentiation, dedifferentiation, and decreased levels of insulin gene regulatory proteins. However, none of these have considered the possibility that endogenous self-repair of existing β cells may be an important factor. To examine this hypothesis, we conducted studies with female Zucker diabetic fatty rats fed a high-fat diet (HFD) for 1, 2, 4, 7, 9, 18, or 28 days, followed by a return to regular chow for 2-3 weeks. Repair was defined as reversal of elevated blood glucose and of inappropriately low blood insulin levels caused by a HFD, as well as reversal of structural damage visualized by imaging studies. We observed evidence of functional β cell damage after a 9-day exposure to a HFD and then repair after 2-3 weeks of being returned to normal chow (blood glucose [BG] = 348 ± 30 vs. 126 ± 3; mg/dl; days 9 vs. 23 day, P < 0.01). After 18- and 28-day exposure to a HFD, damage was more severe and repair was less evident. Insulin levels progressively diminished with 9-day exposure to a HFD; after returning to a regular diet, insulin levels rebounded toward, but did not reach, normal values. Increase in β cell mass was 4-fold after 9 days and 3-fold after 18 days, and there was no increase after 28 days of a HFD. Increases in β cell mass during a HFD were not different when comparing values before and after a return to regular diet within the 9-, 18-, or 28-day studies. No changes were observed in apoptosis or β cell replication. Formation of intracellular markers of oxidative stress, intranuclear translocation of Nrf2, and formation of intracellular antioxidant proteins indicated the participation of HFD/oxidative stress induction of the Nrf2/antioxidant pathway. Flow cytometry-based assessment of β cell volume, morphology, and insulin-specific immunoreactivity, as well as ultrastructural analysis by transmission electron microscopy, revealed that short-term exposure to a HFD produced significant changes in β cell morphology and function that are reversible after returning to regular chow. These results suggest that a possible mechanism mediating the ability of β cells to self-repair after a short-term exposure to a HFD is the activation of the Nrf2/antioxidant pathway.
许多理论被提出来以更好地理解为什么β细胞功能和结构在 2 型糖尿病(T2D)的发展过程中无情地恶化。这些理论包括炎症、细胞凋亡、复制、新生、自噬、分化、去分化和胰岛素基因调节蛋白水平降低。然而,这些理论都没有考虑到现有β细胞的内源性自我修复可能是一个重要因素。为了检验这一假说,我们对喂食高脂肪饮食(HFD)的雌性 Zucker 糖尿病肥胖大鼠进行了研究,这些大鼠喂食 HFD 的时间分别为 1、2、4、7、9、18 或 28 天,然后再恢复正常饮食 2-3 周。修复被定义为逆转 HFD 引起的血糖升高和胰岛素水平不适当降低,以及通过成像研究观察到的结构损伤的逆转。我们在暴露于 HFD 9 天后观察到β细胞功能损伤的证据,然后在恢复正常饮食 2-3 周后观察到修复(血糖[BG]=348±30 与 126±3;mg/dl;第 9 天与第 23 天,P<0.01)。在暴露于 HFD 18 天和 28 天后,损伤更为严重,修复不太明显。胰岛素水平随着 9 天的 HFD 暴露而逐渐降低;恢复正常饮食后,胰岛素水平回升,但未达到正常水平。β细胞质量增加了 4 倍,在 9 天后增加了 3 倍,在 28 天后增加了 18 天后增加了 3 倍,在 HFD 后没有增加。在 9 天、18 天或 28 天的研究中,比较恢复正常饮食前后的值时,HFD 期间β细胞质量的增加没有差异。未观察到细胞凋亡或β细胞复制的变化。细胞内氧化应激标志物的形成、核内 Nrf2 的易位以及细胞内抗氧化蛋白的形成表明 HFD/氧化应激诱导 Nrf2/抗氧化途径的参与。基于流式细胞术的β细胞体积、形态和胰岛素特异性免疫反应性评估,以及透射电子显微镜的超微结构分析,揭示了短期暴露于 HFD 会导致β细胞形态和功能发生显著变化,而在恢复正常饮食后这些变化是可逆的。这些结果表明,介导β细胞在短期暴露于 HFD 后自我修复能力的可能机制是 Nrf2/抗氧化途径的激活。