JCI Insight (May 2021)

Perilipin 2 downregulation in β cells impairs insulin secretion under nutritional stress and damages mitochondria

  • Akansha Mishra,
  • Siming Liu,
  • Joseph Promes,
  • Mikako Harata,
  • William Sivitz,
  • Brian Fink,
  • Gourav Bhardwaj,
  • Brian T. O’Neill,
  • Chen Kang,
  • Rajan Sah,
  • Stefan Strack,
  • Samuel Stephens,
  • Timothy King,
  • Laura Jackson,
  • Andrew S. Greenberg,
  • Frederick Anokye-Danso,
  • Rexford S. Ahima,
  • James Ankrum,
  • Yumi Imai

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 9

Abstract

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Perilipin 2 (PLIN2) is a lipid droplet (LD) protein in β cells that increases under nutritional stress. Downregulation of PLIN2 is often sufficient to reduce LD accumulation. To determine whether PLIN2 positively or negatively affects β cell function under nutritional stress, PLIN2 was downregulated in mouse β cells, INS1 cells, and human islet cells. β Cell–specific deletion of PLIN2 in mice on a high-fat diet reduced glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) in vivo and in vitro. Downregulation of PLIN2 in INS1 cells blunted GSIS after 24-hour incubation with 0.2 mM palmitic acid. Downregulation of PLIN2 in human pseudoislets cultured at 5.6 mM glucose impaired both phases of GSIS, indicating that PLIN2 is critical for GSIS. Downregulation of PLIN2 decreased specific OXPHOS proteins in all 3 models and reduced oxygen consumption rates in INS1 cells and mouse islets. Moreover, we found that PLIN2-deficient INS1 cells increased the distribution of a fluorescent oleic acid analog to mitochondria and showed signs of mitochondrial stress, as indicated by susceptibility to fragmentation and alterations of acyl-carnitines and glucose metabolites. Collectively, PLIN2 in β cells has an important role in preserving insulin secretion, β cell metabolism, and mitochondrial function under nutritional stress.

Keywords