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Downregulation of Carnitine Acyl-Carnitine Translocase by miRNAs 132 and 212 Amplifies Glucose-Stimulated Insulin Secretion

Authors :
Sushant Bhatnagar
Randall L. Mynatt
Jin Shang
Deborah M. Muoio
Nancy A. Thornberry
Mary E. Rabaglia
Alan D. Attie
Eric E. Schadt
Yun-Ping Zhou
Mark P. Keller
Mufaddal S. Soni
Olga Ilkayeva
Source :
Diabetes
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Diabetes Association, 2014.

Abstract

We previously demonstrated that micro-RNAs (miRNAs) 132 and 212 are differentially upregulated in response to obesity in two mouse strains that differ in their susceptibility to obesity-induced diabetes. Here we show the overexpression of miRNAs 132 and 212 enhances insulin secretion (IS) in response to glucose and other secretagogues including nonfuel stimuli. We determined that carnitine acyl-carnitine translocase (CACT; Slc25a20) is a direct target of these miRNAs. CACT is responsible for transporting long-chain acyl-carnitines into the mitochondria for β-oxidation. Small interfering RNA–mediated knockdown of CACT in β-cells led to the accumulation of fatty acyl-carnitines and enhanced IS. The addition of long-chain fatty acyl-carnitines promoted IS from rat insulinoma β-cells (INS-1) as well as primary mouse islets. The effect on INS-1 cells was augmented in response to suppression of CACT. A nonhydrolyzable ether analog of palmitoyl-carnitine stimulated IS, showing that β-oxidation of palmitoyl-carnitine is not required for its stimulation of IS. These studies establish a link between miRNA-dependent regulation of CACT and fatty acyl-carnitine–mediated regulation of IS.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1939327X and 00121797
Volume :
63
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eee0a09ac0b6be2da0e5fee40deb83ae