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Integrated In Vivo Quantitative Proteomics and Nutrient Tracing Reveals Age-Related Metabolic Rewiring of Pancreatic β Cell Function.

Citation
Wortham, M., et al. “Integrated In Vivo Quantitative Proteomics And Nutrient Tracing Reveals Age-Related Metabolic Rewiring Of Pancreatic Β Cell Function.”. Cell Reports, pp. 2904-2918.e8.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Matthew Wortham, Jacqueline R Benthuysen, Martina Wallace, Jeffrey N Savas, Francesca Mulas, Ajit S Divakaruni, Fenfen Liu, Verena Albert, Brandon L Taylor, Yinghui Sui, Enrique Saez, Anne N Murphy, John R Yates, Christian M Metallo, Maike Sander
Keywords SILAM MudPIT mass spectrometry, TCA cycle, aging, amplifying pathway, insulin secretion, isotope tracing, quantitative proteomics, triggering pathway, β cell, β cell maturation
Abstract

Pancreatic β cell physiology changes substantially throughout life, yet the mechanisms that drive these changes are poorly understood. Here, we performed comprehensive in vivo quantitative proteomic profiling of pancreatic islets from juvenile and 1-year-old mice. The analysis revealed striking differences in abundance of enzymes controlling glucose metabolism. We show that these changes in protein abundance are associated with higher activities of glucose metabolic enzymes involved in coupling factor generation as well as increased activity of the coupling factor-dependent amplifying pathway of insulin secretion. Nutrient tracing and targeted metabolomics demonstrated accelerated accumulation of glucose-derived metabolites and coupling factors in islets from 1-year-old mice, indicating that age-related changes in glucose metabolism contribute to improved glucose-stimulated insulin secretion with age. Together, our study provides an in-depth characterization of age-related changes in the islet proteome and establishes metabolic rewiring as an important mechanism for age-associated changes in β cell function.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell reports
Volume
25
Issue
10
Number of Pages
2904-2918.e8
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2211-1247
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2018.11.031
Alternate Journal
Cell Rep
PMID
30517875
PMCID
PMC6317899
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