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Showing papers by "David Sebastián published in 2005"


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 2005-Diabetes
TL;DR: The results provide direct support for the hypothesis that the malonyl-CoA/CPTI interaction is a component of a metabolic signaling network that controls insulin secretion.
Abstract: Carnitine palmitoyltransferase I, which is expressed in the pancreas as the liver isoform (LCPTI), catalyzes the rate-limiting step in the transport of fatty acids into the mitochondria for their oxidation. Malonyl-CoA derived from glucose metabolism regulates fatty acid oxidation by inhibiting LCPTI. To examine directly whether the availability of long-chain fatty acyl-CoA (LC-CoA) affects the regulation of insulin secretion in the β-cell and whether malonyl-CoA may act as a metabolic coupling factor in the β-cell, we infected INS(832/13) cells and rat islets with an adenovirus encoding a mutant form of LCPTI (Ad-LCPTI M593S) that is insensitive to malonyl-CoA. In Ad-LCPTI M593S–infected INS(832/13) cells, LCPTI activity increased sixfold. This was associated with enhanced fatty acid oxidation, at any glucose concentration, and a 60% suppression of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS). In isolated rat islets in which LCPTI M593S was overexpressed, GSIS decreased 40%. The impairment of GSIS in Ad-LCPTI M593S–infected INS(832/13) cells was not recovered when cells were incubated with 0.25 mmol/l palmitate, indicating the deep metabolic influence of a nonregulated fatty acid oxidation system. At high glucose concentration, overexpression of a malonyl-CoA–insensitive form of LCPTI reduced partitioning of exogenous palmitate into lipid esterification products and decreased protein kinase C activation. Moreover, LCPTI M593S expression impaired KATP channel–independent GSIS in INS(832/13) cells. The LCPTI M593S mutant caused more pronounced alterations in GSIS and lipid partitioning (fat oxidation, esterification, and the level of nonesterified palmitate) than LCPTI wt in INS(832/13) cells that were transduced with these constructs. The results provide direct support for the hypothesis that the malonyl-CoA/CPTI interaction is a component of a metabolic signaling network that controls insulin secretion.

79 citations