BACKGROUND: Free fatty acids (FFAs) acutely stimulate but chronically impair glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from beta-cells. The G protein-coupled transmembrane receptor 40 (GPR40) mediates both acute and chronic effects of FFAs on insulin secretion and plays a role in glucose homeostasis. Limited information is available on the effect of GPR40 genetic abnormalities on insulin secretion and metabolic regulation in human subjects. STUDY DESIGN AND RESULTS: For in vivo studies, we screened 734 subjects for the coding region of GPR40 and identified a new single-nucleotide mutation (Gly180Ser). The mean allele frequency was 0.75%, which progressively increased (P < 0.05) from nonobese subjects (0.42%) to moderately obese (body mass index = 30-39.9 kg/m2, 1.07%) and severely obese patients (body mass index > or = 40 kg/m2, 2.60%). The relationship between the GPR40 mutation, insulin secretion, and metabolic alterations was studied in 11 Gly/Ser mutation carriers. In these subjects, insulin secretion (insulinogenic index derived from oral glucose tolerance test) was significantly lower than in 692 Gly/Gly carriers (86.0 +/- 48.2 vs. 183.7 +/- 134.4, P < 0.005). Moreover, a case-control study indicated that plasma insulin and C-peptide responses to a lipid load were significantly (P < 0.05) lower in six Gly/Ser than in 12 Gly/Gly carriers. In vitro experiments in HeLa cells cotransfected with aequorin and the mutated Gly/Ser GPR40 indicated that intracellular Ca2+ concentration increase after oleic acid was significantly lower than in Gly/Gly GPR40-transfected cells. This fact was confirmed using fura-2 acetoxymethyl ester. CONCLUSIONS: This newly identified GPR40 variant results in a loss of function that prevents the beta-cell ability to adequately sense lipids as an insulin secretory stimulus because of impaired intracellular Ca2+ concentration increase.
Loss-of-function mutation of the GPR40 gene associates with abnormal stimulated insulin secretion by acting on intracellular calcium mobilization
VETTOR, ROBERTO;DE STEFANI, DIEGO;TREVELLIN, ELISABETTA;ROSSATO, MARCO;MILAN, GABRIELLA;FEDERSPIL, GIOVANNI;VITIELLO, LIBERO;RIZZUTO, ROSARIO;
2008
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Free fatty acids (FFAs) acutely stimulate but chronically impair glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from beta-cells. The G protein-coupled transmembrane receptor 40 (GPR40) mediates both acute and chronic effects of FFAs on insulin secretion and plays a role in glucose homeostasis. Limited information is available on the effect of GPR40 genetic abnormalities on insulin secretion and metabolic regulation in human subjects. STUDY DESIGN AND RESULTS: For in vivo studies, we screened 734 subjects for the coding region of GPR40 and identified a new single-nucleotide mutation (Gly180Ser). The mean allele frequency was 0.75%, which progressively increased (P < 0.05) from nonobese subjects (0.42%) to moderately obese (body mass index = 30-39.9 kg/m2, 1.07%) and severely obese patients (body mass index > or = 40 kg/m2, 2.60%). The relationship between the GPR40 mutation, insulin secretion, and metabolic alterations was studied in 11 Gly/Ser mutation carriers. In these subjects, insulin secretion (insulinogenic index derived from oral glucose tolerance test) was significantly lower than in 692 Gly/Gly carriers (86.0 +/- 48.2 vs. 183.7 +/- 134.4, P < 0.005). Moreover, a case-control study indicated that plasma insulin and C-peptide responses to a lipid load were significantly (P < 0.05) lower in six Gly/Ser than in 12 Gly/Gly carriers. In vitro experiments in HeLa cells cotransfected with aequorin and the mutated Gly/Ser GPR40 indicated that intracellular Ca2+ concentration increase after oleic acid was significantly lower than in Gly/Gly GPR40-transfected cells. This fact was confirmed using fura-2 acetoxymethyl ester. CONCLUSIONS: This newly identified GPR40 variant results in a loss of function that prevents the beta-cell ability to adequately sense lipids as an insulin secretory stimulus because of impaired intracellular Ca2+ concentration increase.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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