JCI Insight (May 2021)

Pancreatic β cell–selective zinc transporter 8 insufficiency accelerates diabetes associated with islet amyloidosis

  • Jie Xu,
  • Nadeeja Wijesekara,
  • Romario Regeenes,
  • Dana Al Rijjal,
  • Anthony L. Piro,
  • Youchen Song,
  • Anne Wu,
  • Alpana Bhattacharjee,
  • Ying Liu,
  • Lucy Marzban,
  • Jonathan V. Rocheleau,
  • Paul E. Fraser,
  • Feihan F. Dai,
  • Cheng Hu,
  • Michael B. Wheeler

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 10

Abstract

Read online

GWAS have shown that the common R325W variant of SLC30A8 (ZnT8) increases the risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, ZnT8 haploinsufficiency is protective against T2D in humans, counterintuitive to earlier work in humans and mouse models. Therefore, whether decreasing ZnT8 activity is beneficial or detrimental to β cell function, especially under conditions of metabolic stress, remains unknown. In order to examine whether the existence of human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP), a coresident of the insulin granule, affects the role of ZnT8 in regulating β cell function, hIAPP-expressing transgenics were generated with reduced ZnT8 (ZnT8B+/– hIAPP) or null ZnT8 (ZnT8B–/– hIAPP) expression specifically in β cells. We showed that ZnT8B–/– hIAPP mice on a high-fat diet had intensified amyloid deposition and further impaired glucose tolerance and insulin secretion compared with control, ZnT8B–/–, and hIAPP mice. This can in part be attributed to impaired glucose sensing and islet cell synchronicity. Importantly, ZnT8B+/– hIAPP mice were also glucose intolerant and had reduced insulin secretion and increased amyloid aggregation compared with controls. These data suggest that loss of or reduced ZnT8 activity in β cells heightened the toxicity induced by hIAPP, leading to impaired β cell function and glucose homeostasis associated with metabolic stress.

Keywords