Saturated fatty acids synergize with elevated glucose to cause pancreatic β-cell death

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El-Assaad, Wissal
Buteau, Jean
Peyot, Marie Line
Nolan, Christopher
Roduit, Raphael
Hardy, Serge
Joly, Erik
Dbaibo, Ghassan
Rosenberg, Lawrence
Prentki, Marc

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We have proposed the "glucolipotoxicity" hypothesis in which elevated free fatty acids (FFAs) together with hyperglycemia are synergistic in causing islet β-cell damage because high glucose inhibits fat oxidation and consequently lipid detoxification. The effects of 1-2 d culture of both rat INS 832/13 cells and human islet •-cells were investigated in medium containing glucose (5, 11, 20 mM) in the presence or absence of various FFAs. A marked synergistic effect of elevated concentrations of glucose and saturated FFA (palmitate and stearate) on inducing β-cell death by apoptosis was found in both INS 832/13 and human islet β-cells. In comparison, linoleate (polyunsaturated) synergized only modestly with high glucose, whereas oleate (monounsaturated) was not toxic. Treating cells with the acyl-coenzyme A synthase inhibitor triacsin C, or the AMP kinase activators metformin and 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-β-D-ribofuranoside that redirect lipid partitioning to oxidation, curtailed glucolipotoxicity. In contrast, the fat oxidation inhibitor etomoxir, like glucose, markedly enhanced palmitate-induced cell death. The data indicate that FFAs must be metabolized to long chain fatty acyl-CoA to exert toxicity, the effect of which can be reduced by activating fatty acid oxidation. The results support the glucolipotoxicity hypothesis of β-cell failure proposing that elevated FFAs are particularly toxic in the context of hyperglycemia.

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Endocrinology

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