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Metabolic control of adaptive β-cell proliferation by the protein deacetylase SIRT2

Authors

  • M. Wortham
  • B. Ramms
  • C. Zeng
  • J.R. Benthuysen
  • S. Sai
  • D.P. Pollow
  • F. Liu
  • M. Schlichting
  • A.R. Harrington
  • B. Liu
  • T.P. Prakash
  • E.C. Pirie
  • H. Zhu
  • S. Baghdasarian
  • J. Auwerx
  • O.S. Shirihai
  • M. Sander

Journal

  • bioRxiv

Citation

  • bioRxiv

Abstract

  • Selective and controlled expansion of endogenous β-cells has been pursued as a potential therapy for diabetes. Ideally, such therapies would preserve feedback control of β-cell proliferation to avoid excessive β-cell expansion and an increased risk of hypoglycemia. Here, we identified a regulator of β-cell proliferation whose inactivation results in controlled β-cell expansion: the protein deacetylase Sirtuin 2 (SIRT2). Sirt2 deletion in β-cells of mice increased β-cell proliferation during hyperglycemia with little effect in homeostatic conditions, indicating preservation of feedback control of β-cell mass. SIRT2 restrains proliferation of human islet β-cells cultured in glucose concentrations above the glycemic set point, demonstrating conserved SIRT2 function. Analysis of acetylated proteins in islets treated with a SIRT2 inhibitor revealed that SIRT2 deacetylates enzymes involved in oxidative phosphorylation, dampening the adaptive increase in oxygen consumption during hyperglycemia. At the transcriptomic level, Sirt2 inactivation has context-dependent effects on β-cells, with Sirt2 controlling how β-cells interpret hyperglycemia as a stress. Finally, we provide proof-of-principle that systemic administration of a GLP1-coupled Sirt2-targeting antisense oligonucleotide achieves β-cell selective Sirt2 inactivation and stimulates β-cell proliferation under hyperglycemic conditions. Overall, these studies identify a therapeutic strategy for increasing β-cell mass in diabetes without circumventing feedback control of β-cell proliferation.


DOI

doi:10.1101/2024.02.24.581864