Aims/hypothesis
The role of the redox adaptor protein p66Shc as a potential mediator of saturated fatty acid (FA)-induced beta cell death was investigated.
Methods
The effects of the FA palmitate on p66Shc expression were evaluated in human and murine islets and in rat insulin-secreting INS-1E cells. p66Shc expression was also measured in islets from mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD) and from human donors with different BMIs. Cell apoptosis was quantified by two independent assays. The role of p66Shc was investigated using pancreatic islets from p66 Shc−/− mice and in INS-1E cells with knockdown of p66Shc or overexpression of wild-type and phosphorylation-defective p66Shc. Production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was evaluated by the dihydroethidium oxidation method.
Results
Palmitate induced a selective increase in p66Shc protein expression and phosphorylation on Ser36 and augmented apoptosis in human and mouse islets and in INS-1E cells. Inhibiting the tumour suppressor protein p53 prevented both the palmitate-induced increase in p66Shc expression and beta cell apoptosis. Palmitate-induced apoptosis was abrogated in islets from p66 Shc−/− mice and following p66 Shc knockdown in INS-1E cells; by contrast, overexpression of p66Shc, but not that of the phosphorylation-defective p66Shc mutant, enhanced palmitate-induced apoptosis. The pro-apoptotic effects of p66Shc were dependent upon its c-Jun N-terminal kinase-mediated phosphorylation on Ser36 and associated with generation of ROS. p66Shc protein expression and function were also elevated in islets from HFD-fed mice and from obese/overweight cadaveric human donors.
Conclusions/interpretation
p53-dependent augmentation of p66Shc expression and function represents a key signalling response contributing to beta cell apoptosis under conditions of lipotoxicity.