Communications Biology (Jan 2024)

The adhesion GPCR GPR116/ADGRF5 has a dual function in pancreatic islets regulating somatostatin release and islet development

  • Juliane Röthe,
  • Robert Kraft,
  • Albert Ricken,
  • Isabell Kaczmarek,
  • Madlen Matz-Soja,
  • Karsten Winter,
  • André Nguyen Dietzsch,
  • Julia Buchold,
  • Marie-Gabrielle Ludwig,
  • Ines Liebscher,
  • Torsten Schöneberg,
  • Doreen Thor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-05783-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Glucose homeostasis is maintained by hormones secreted from different cell types of the pancreatic islets and controlled by manifold input including signals mediated through G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). RNA-seq analyses revealed expression of numerous GPCRs in mouse and human pancreatic islets, among them Gpr116/Adgrf5. GPR116 is an adhesion GPCR mainly found in lung and required for surfactant secretion. Here, we demonstrate that GPR116 is involved in the somatostatin release from pancreatic delta cells using a whole-body as well as a cell-specific knock-out mouse model. Interestingly, the whole-body GPR116 deficiency causes further changes such as decreased beta-cell mass, lower number of small islets, and reduced pancreatic insulin content. Glucose homeostasis in global GPR116-deficient mice is maintained by counter-acting mechanisms modulating insulin degradation. Our data highlight an important function of GPR116 in controlling glucose homeostasis.