iScience (Mar 2018)

Loss of Deubiquitinase USP1 Blocks Pancreatic β-Cell Apoptosis by Inhibiting DNA Damage Response

  • Kanaka Durga Devi Gorrepati,
  • Blaz Lupse,
  • Karthika Annamalai,
  • Ting Yuan,
  • Kathrin Maedler,
  • Amin Ardestani

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
pp. 72 – 86

Abstract

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Summary: Impaired pancreatic β-cell survival contributes to the reduced β-cell mass in diabetes, but underlying regulatory mechanisms and key players in this process remain incompletely understood. Here, we identified the deubiquitinase ubiquitin-specific protease 1 (USP1) as an important player in the regulation of β-cell apoptosis under diabetic conditions. Genetic silencing and pharmacological suppression of USP1 blocked β-cell death in several experimental models of diabetes in vitro and ex vivo without compromising insulin content and secretion and without impairing β-cell maturation/identity genes in human islets. Our further analyses showed that USP1 inhibition attenuated DNA damage response (DDR) signals, which were highly elevated in diabetic β-cells, suggesting a USP1-dependent regulation of DDR in stressed β-cells. Our findings highlight a novel function of USP1 in the control of β-cell survival, and its inhibition may have a potential therapeutic relevance for the suppression of β-cell death in diabetes. : Biochemical Mechanism; Endocrinology; Cell Biology Subject Areas: Biochemical Mechanism, Endocrinology, Cell Biology