FLIP switches Fas-mediated glucose signaling in human pancreatic β cells from apoptosis to cell replication

K Maedler, A Fontana, F Ris… - Proceedings of the …, 2002 - National Acad Sciences
K Maedler, A Fontana, F Ris, P Sergeev, C Toso, J Oberholzer, R Lehmann, F Bachmann…
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2002National Acad Sciences
Type 2 diabetes mellitus results from an inadequate adaptation of the functional pancreatic β
cell mass in the face of insulin resistance. Changes in the concentration of glucose play an
essential role in the regulation of β cell turnover. In human islets, elevated glucose
concentrations impair β cell proliferation and induce β cell apoptosis via up-regulation of the
Fas receptor. Recently, it has been shown that the caspase-8 inhibitor FLIP may divert Fas-
mediated death signals into those for cell proliferation in lymphatic cells. We observed …
Type 2 diabetes mellitus results from an inadequate adaptation of the functional pancreatic β cell mass in the face of insulin resistance. Changes in the concentration of glucose play an essential role in the regulation of β cell turnover. In human islets, elevated glucose concentrations impair β cell proliferation and induce β cell apoptosis via up-regulation of the Fas receptor. Recently, it has been shown that the caspase-8 inhibitor FLIP may divert Fas-mediated death signals into those for cell proliferation in lymphatic cells. We observed expression of FLIP in human pancreatic β cells of nondiabetic individuals, which was decreased in tissue sections of type 2 diabetic patients. In vitro exposure of islets from nondiabetic organ donors to high glucose levels decreased FLIP expression and increased the percentage of apoptotic terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated UTP end labeling (TUNEL)-positive β cells; FLIP was no longer detectable in such TUNEL-positive β cells. Up-regulation of FLIP, by incubation with transforming growth factor β or by transfection with an expression vector coding for FLIP, protected β cells from glucose-induced apoptosis, restored β cell proliferation, and improved β cell function. The beneficial effects of FLIP overexpression were blocked by an antagonistic anti-Fas antibody, indicating their dependence on Fas receptor activation. The present data provide evidence for expression of FLIP in the human β cell and suggest a novel approach to prevent and treat diabetes by switching Fas signaling from apoptosis to proliferation.
National Acad Sciences