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Metabolic Effects of Selective Deletion of Group VIA Phospholipase A from Macrophages or Pancreatic Islet Beta-Cells.

Citation
Turk, J., et al. “Metabolic Effects Of Selective Deletion Of Group Via Phospholipase A From Macrophages Or Pancreatic Islet Beta-Cells.”. Biomolecules.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author John Turk, Haowei Song, Mary Wohltmann, Cheryl Frankfater, Xiaoyong Lei, Sasanka Ramanadham
Keywords glucose tolerance, group VIA phospholipase A2, Insulin resistance, insulin secretion, pancreatic islets, β-cells
Abstract

To examine the role of group VIA phospholipase A (iPLAβ) in specific cell lineages in insulin secretion and insulin action, we prepared mice with a selective iPLAβ deficiency in cells of myelomonocytic lineage, including macrophages (MØ-iPLAβ-KO), or in insulin-secreting β-cells (β-Cell-iPLAβ-KO), respectively. MØ-iPLAβ-KO mice exhibited normal glucose tolerance when fed standard chow and better glucose tolerance than floxed-iPLAβ control mice after consuming a high-fat diet (HFD). MØ-iPLAβ-KO mice exhibited normal glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) in vivo and from isolated islets ex vivo compared to controls. Male MØ-iPLAβ-KO mice exhibited enhanced insulin responsivity vs. controls after a prolonged HFD. In contrast, β-cell-iPLAβ-KO mice exhibited impaired glucose tolerance when fed standard chow, and glucose tolerance deteriorated further when introduced to a HFD. β-Cell-iPLAβ-KO mice exhibited impaired GSIS in vivo and from isolated islets ex vivo vs. controls. β-Cell-iPLAβ-KO mice also exhibited an enhanced insulin responsivity compared to controls. These findings suggest that MØ iPLAβ participates in HFD-induced deterioration in glucose tolerance and that this mainly reflects an effect on insulin responsivity rather than on insulin secretion. In contrast, β-cell iPLAβ plays a role in GSIS and also appears to confer some protection against deterioration in β-cell functions induced by a HFD.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Biomolecules
Volume
10
Issue
10
Date Published
10/2020
ISSN Number
2218-273X
DOI
10.3390/biom10101455
Alternate Journal
Biomolecules
PMID
33080873
PMCID
PMC7602969
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