Microtubules regulate pancreatic β-cell heterogeneity via spatiotemporal control of insulin secretion hot spots

Author:

Trogden Kathryn P1ORCID,Lee Justin1,Bracey Kai M1,Ho Kung-Hsien1,McKinney Hudson1,Zhu Xiaodong12,Arpag Goker1ORCID,Folland Thomas G3,Osipovich Anna B45,Magnuson Mark A145,Zanic Marija167ORCID,Gu Guoqiang1,Holmes William R8910,Kaverina Irina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell and Developmental Biology and Program in Developmental Biology, Vanderbilt University

2. Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt University

4. Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University

5. Center for Stem Cell Biology, Vanderbilt University

6. Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Vanderbilt University

7. Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University

8. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Vanderbilt University

9. Department of Mathematics, Vanderbilt University

10. Quantitative Systems Biology Center, Vanderbilt University

Abstract

Heterogeneity of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) in pancreatic islets is physiologically important but poorly understood. Here, we utilize mouse islets to determine how microtubules (MTs) affect secretion toward the vascular extracellular matrix at single cell and subcellular levels. Our data indicate that MT stability in the β-cell population is heterogenous, and that GSIS is suppressed in cells with highly stable MTs. Consistently, MT hyper-stabilization prevents, and MT depolymerization promotes the capacity of single β-cell for GSIS. Analysis of spatiotemporal patterns of secretion events shows that MT depolymerization activates otherwise dormant β-cells via initiation of secretion clusters (hot spots). MT depolymerization also enhances secretion from individual cells, introducing both additional clusters and scattered events. Interestingly, without MTs, the timing of clustered secretion is dysregulated, extending the first phase of GSIS and causing oversecretion. In contrast, glucose-induced Ca2+ influx was not affected by MT depolymerization yet required for secretion under these conditions, indicating that MT-dependent regulation of secretion hot spots acts in parallel with Ca2+ signaling. Our findings uncover a novel MT function in tuning insulin secretion hot spots, which leads to accurately measured and timed response to glucose stimuli and promotes functional β-cell heterogeneity.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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