Publication:
Toxicity Induced by Cytokines, Glucose, and Lipids Increase Apoptosis and Hamper Insulin Secretion in the 1.1E7 Beta Cell-Line

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2021-03-04

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Diaz-Ganete, Antonia
Quiroga-de-Castro, Aranzazu
Mateos, Rosa M.
Medina, Francisco
Segundo, Carmen
Lechuga-Sancho, Alfonso M.

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MDPI
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Basic research on types 1 and 2 diabetes mellitus require early stage studies using beta cells or cell lines, ideally of human origin and with preserved insulin secretion in response to glucose. The 1.1E7 cells are a hybrid cell line resulting from the electrofusion of dispersed human islets and PANC-1 cells, capable of secreting insulin in response to glucose, but their survival and function under toxic conditions remains untested. This characterization is the purpose of the present study. We treated these cells with a cytokine mix, high glucose, palmitate, and the latter two combined. Under these conditions, we measured cell viability and apoptosis (MTT, Caspase Glo and TUNEL assays, as well as caspase-8 and -9 levels by Western blotting), endoplasmic reticulum stress markers (EIF2AK3, HSPA4, EIF2a, and HSPA5) by real-time PCR, and insulin secretion with a glucose challenge. All of these stimuli (i) induce apoptosis and ER stress markers expression, (ii) reduce mRNA amounts of 2-5 components of genes involved in the insulin secretory pathway, and (iii) abrogate the insulin release capability of 1.1E7 cells in response to glucose. The most pronounced effects were observed with cytokines and with palmitate and high glucose combined. This characterization may well serve as the starting point for those choosing this cell line for future basic research on certain aspects of diabetes.

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Medical Subject Headings::Phenomena and Processes::Cell Physiological Phenomena::Cell Physiological Processes::Cell Death::Apoptosis
Medical Subject Headings::Anatomy::Cells::Cells, Cultured::Cell Line
Medical Subject Headings::Phenomena and Processes::Cell Physiological Phenomena::Cell Physiological Processes::Cell Survival
Medical Subject Headings::Chemicals and Drugs::Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins::Peptides::Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins::Cytokines
Medical Subject Headings::Diseases::Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases::Metabolic Diseases::Glucose Metabolism Disorders::Diabetes Mellitus
Medical Subject Headings::Phenomena and Processes::Genetic Phenomena::Genetic Processes::Gene Expression
Medical Subject Headings::Chemicals and Drugs::Carbohydrates::Monosaccharides::Hexoses::Glucose
Medical Subject Headings::Anatomy::Cells::Endocrine Cells::Enteroendocrine Cells::Insulin-Secreting Cells
Medical Subject Headings::Chemicals and Drugs::Lipids::Fatty Acids::Palmitic Acids::Palmitates
Medical Subject Headings::Chemicals and Drugs::Nucleic Acids, Nucleotides, and Nucleosides::Nucleic Acids::RNA::RNA, Messenger

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Apoptosis, Beta cell, Cytokines, Cytotoxicity, Diabetes, Glucotoxicity, Lipotoxicity, Mechanism, Células secretoras de insulina, Citocinas, Citotoxicidad inmunológica, Glucosa, Lípidos, Toxicidad

Citation

Diaz-Ganete A, Quiroga-de-Castro A, Mateos RM, Medina F, Segundo C, Lechuga-Sancho AM. Toxicity Induced by Cytokines, Glucose, and Lipids Increase Apoptosis and Hamper Insulin Secretion in the 1.1E7 Beta Cell-Line. Int J Mol Sci. 2021 Mar 4;22(5):2559