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Beta-cell excitability and excitability-driven diabetes in adult Zebrafish islets.

Citation
Emfinger, C. H., et al. “Beta-Cell Excitability And Excitability-Driven Diabetes In Adult Zebrafish Islets.”. Physiological Reports, p. e14101.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Christopher H Emfinger, Réka Lőrincz, Yixi Wang, Nathaniel W York, Soma S Singareddy, Jennifer M Ikle, Robert C Tryon, Conor McClenaghan, Zeenat A Shyr, Yan Huang, Christopher A Reissaus, Dirk Meyer, David W Piston, Krzysztof Hyrc, Maria S Remedi, Colin G Nichols
Keywords KATP , Calcium channels, insulin secretion, Metabolism, pancreas, zebrafish
Abstract

Islet β-cell membrane excitability is a well-established regulator of mammalian insulin secretion, and defects in β-cell excitability are linked to multiple forms of diabetes. Evolutionary conservation of islet excitability in lower organisms is largely unexplored. Here we show that adult zebrafish islet calcium levels rise in response to elevated extracellular [glucose], with similar concentration-response relationship to mammalian β-cells. However, zebrafish islet calcium transients are nor well coupled, with a shallower glucose-dependence of cytoplasmic calcium concentration. We have also generated transgenic zebrafish that conditionally express gain-of-function mutations in ATP-sensitive K channels (K -GOF) in β-cells. Following induction, these fish become profoundly diabetic, paralleling features of mammalian diabetes resulting from equivalent mutations. K -GOF fish become severely hyperglycemic, with slowed growth, and their islets lose glucose-induced calcium responses. These results indicate that, although lacking tight cell-cell coupling of intracellular Ca , adult zebrafish islets recapitulate similar excitability-driven β-cell glucose responsiveness to those in mammals, and exhibit profound susceptibility to diabetes as a result of inexcitability. While illustrating evolutionary conservation of islet excitability in lower vertebrates, these results also provide important validation of zebrafish as a suitable animal model in which to identify modulators of islet excitability and diabetes.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Physiological reports
Volume
7
Issue
11
Number of Pages
e14101
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
2051-817X
DOI
10.14814/phy2.14101
Alternate Journal
Physiol Rep
PMID
31161721
PMCID
PMC6546968
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