Division of Endocrinology, Duke Molecular Physiology Institute, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
JCI Insight. 2019 Mar 21;4(6). doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.126688.
Bariatric surgeries including vertical sleeve gastrectomy (VSG) ameliorate obesity and diabetes. Weight loss and accompanying increases to insulin sensitivity contribute to improved glycemia after surgery; however, studies in humans also suggest weight-independent actions of bariatric procedures to lower blood glucose, possibly by improving insulin secretion. To evaluate this hypothesis, we compared VSG-operated mice with pair-fed, sham-surgical controls (PF-Sham) 2 weeks after surgery. This paradigm yielded similar postoperative body weight and insulin sensitivity between VSG and calorically restricted PF-Sham animals. However, VSG improved glucose tolerance and markedly enhanced insulin secretion during oral nutrient and i.p. glucose challenges compared with controls. Islets from VSG mice displayed a unique transcriptional signature enriched for genes involved in Ca2+ signaling and insulin secretion pathways. This finding suggests that bariatric surgery leads to intrinsic changes within the islet that alter function. Indeed, islets isolated from VSG mice had increased glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and a left-shifted glucose sensitivity curve compared with islets from PF-Sham mice. Isolated islets from VSG animals showed corresponding increases in the pulse duration of glucose-stimulated Ca2+ oscillations. Together, these findings demonstrate a weight-independent improvement in glycemic control following VSG, which is, in part, driven by improved insulin secretion and associated with substantial changes in islet gene expression. These results support a model in which β cells play a key role in the adaptation to bariatric surgery and the improved glucose tolerance that is typical of these procedures.
减重手术包括垂直袖状胃切除术(VSG)可以改善肥胖和糖尿病。手术后体重减轻和随之而来的胰岛素敏感性增加有助于改善血糖;然而,人类研究也表明减重手术有降低血糖的体重独立作用,可能通过改善胰岛素分泌。为了评估这一假设,我们在手术后 2 周比较了 VSG 手术的小鼠与等热量限食的假手术对照组(PF-Sham)。这种方案在 VSG 和热量限制的 PF-Sham 动物之间产生了类似的术后体重和胰岛素敏感性。然而,与对照组相比,VSG 显著改善了葡萄糖耐量,并显著增强了口服营养和腹腔内葡萄糖挑战期间的胰岛素分泌。与对照组相比,VSG 小鼠的胰岛显示出独特的转录特征,富含参与 Ca2+信号和胰岛素分泌途径的基因。这一发现表明减重手术导致胰岛内的内在变化,从而改变功能。事实上,与 PF-Sham 小鼠的胰岛相比,从 VSG 小鼠分离的胰岛具有更高的葡萄糖刺激的胰岛素分泌和葡萄糖敏感性曲线向左移位。VSG 动物的胰岛中葡萄糖刺激的 Ca2+振荡的脉冲持续时间相应增加。总之,这些发现表明 VSG 后血糖控制得到了独立于体重的改善,这在一定程度上是由于胰岛素分泌的改善,并伴有胰岛基因表达的显著变化。这些结果支持了β细胞在适应减重手术和这些手术中典型的改善的葡萄糖耐量中发挥关键作用的模型。