Cell Reports (Jul 2015)

Glucagon Couples Hepatic Amino Acid Catabolism to mTOR-Dependent Regulation of α-Cell Mass

  • Mark J. Solloway,
  • Azadeh Madjidi,
  • Chunyan Gu,
  • Jeff Eastham-Anderson,
  • Holly J. Clarke,
  • Noelyn Kljavin,
  • Jose Zavala-Solorio,
  • Lance Kates,
  • Brad Friedman,
  • Matt Brauer,
  • Jianyong Wang,
  • Oliver Fiehn,
  • Ganesh Kolumam,
  • Howard Stern,
  • John B. Lowe,
  • Andrew S. Peterson,
  • Bernard B. Allan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.06.034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
pp. 495 – 510

Abstract

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Understanding the regulation of islet cell mass has important implications for the discovery of regenerative therapies for diabetes. The liver plays a central role in metabolism and the regulation of endocrine cell number, but liver-derived factors that regulate α-cell and β-cell mass remain unidentified. We propose a nutrient-sensing circuit between liver and pancreas in which glucagon-dependent control of hepatic amino acid metabolism regulates α-cell mass. We found that glucagon receptor inhibition reduced hepatic amino acid catabolism, increased serum amino acids, and induced α-cell proliferation in an mTOR-dependent manner. In addition, mTOR inhibition blocked amino-acid-dependent α-cell replication ex vivo and enabled conversion of α-cells into β-like cells in vivo. Serum amino acids and α-cell proliferation were increased in neonatal mice but fell throughout postnatal development in a glucagon-dependent manner. These data reveal that amino acids act as sensors of glucagon signaling and can function as growth factors that increase α-cell proliferation.