Increased insulin secretion and expansion of pancreatic β cell mass work together to maintain normal glucose levels when insulin resistance develops. Changes in glucose concentration have long been known to have profound effects upon the rates of insulin secretion and β cell mass, but various other agents can also cause changes, raising questions about which mechanisms are dominant. Evidence favoring a dominant role for glucose is provided by Terauchi et al. in this issue of the JCI (see the related article beginning on page 246). Mice haploinsufficient for β cell glucokinase (Gck) were unable to increase their β cell mass in response to insulin resistance produced by high-fat feeding. Gck is known to be the glucose sensor for glucose metabolism in β cells. The study also provides strong evidence that insulin receptor substrate 2 (Irs2), which is known to have major effects on β cell growth and survival, is a key downstream mediator of the effects of glucose found in this study.
Gordon C. Weir, Susan Bonner-Weir
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
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Control of beta cell function and proliferation in mice stimulated by small-molecule glucokinase activator under various conditions
A Nakamura, Y Togashi, K Orime, K Sato, J Shirakawa, M Ohsugi, N Kubota, T Kadowaki, Y Terauchi |
Diabetologia | 2012 |
Free Fatty Acids Block Glucose-Induced -Cell Proliferation in Mice by Inducing Cell Cycle Inhibitors p16 and p18
J Pascoe, D Hollern, R Stamateris, M Abbasi, LC Romano, B Zou, CP O'Donnell, A Garcia-Ocana, LC Alonso |
Diabetes | 2012 |
Synergistic Effect of Hyperglycemia and p27kip1 Suppression on Adult Mouse Islet Beta Cell Replication
ST Chen, SH Fu, S Hsu, YY Huang, BR Hsu |
International Journal of Endocrinology | 2012 |
Does Inhibition of -Cell Proliferation by Free Fatty Acid in Mice Explain the Progressive Failure of Insulin Secretion in Type 2 Diabetes?
G Boden |
Diabetes | 2012 |