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REVIEW article

Front. Endocrinol., 27 March 2013
Sec. Clinical Diabetes

Beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance

  • Diabetes Discovery Platform, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa

Beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance are inherently complex with their interrelation for triggering the pathogenesis of diabetes also somewhat undefined. Both pathogenic states induce hyperglycemia and therefore increase insulin demand. Beta cell dysfunction results from inadequate glucose sensing to stimulate insulin secretion therefore elevated glucose concentrations prevail. Persistently elevated glucose concentrations above the physiological range result in the manifestation of hyperglycemia. With systemic insulin resistance, insulin signaling within glucose recipient tissues is defective therefore hyperglycemia perseveres. Beta cell dysfunction supersedes insulin resistance in inducing diabetes. Both pathological states influence each other and presumably synergistically exacerbate diabetes. Preserving beta cell function and insulin signaling in beta cells and insulin signaling in the glucose recipient tissues will maintain glucose homeostasis.

Introduction

Both beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance lead to persistent hyperglycemia which characterizes type 2 diabetes. Many of the susceptibility genes associated with type 2 diabetes by genome-wide investigations (GWAS) were identified as regulators of cell turnover or regeneration (McCarthy and Hattersley, 2008). Most risk variants for type 2 diabetes in healthy populations act through impairing insulin secretion (resulting in beta cell dysfunction) rather than insulin action (resulting in insulin resistance) which establishes that inherited abnormalities of beta cell function or mass (or both) are critical precursors in type 2 diabetes (Florez, 2008; McCarthy, 2010; Voight et al., 2010; Petrie et al., 2011). Recent linkage studies and GWAS have identified >40 genes that increase the risk of type 2 diabetes with the most important diabetes susceptibility gene identified as transcription factor 7-like 2 (tcf7l2), which increases diabetes risk 1.7-fold (Ashcroft and Rorsman, 2012). Potassium voltage-gated channel, KQT-like subfamily, member 1 (Kcnq1) is a type 2 diabetes susceptibility gene implicated in reduced beta cell function and decreased insulin secretion (Bonnefond et al., 2010). Common variants in several neonatal diabetes mellitus and maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) [e.g., potassium inwardly rectifying channel, subfamily J, member 11 (kcnj11), glucokinase (gck), hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 alpha (hnf1α), and hnf1β] are recognized as type 2 diabetes susceptibility variants 6 and 43 (Bonnefond et al., 2010). Reduced expression of the transcription factor, prospero homeobox 1 (Prox1), by cis-regulatory variants altered beta cell insulin secretion which conferred susceptibility to type 2 diabetes (Lecompte et al., 2013).

Beta cell dysfunction is the critical determinant for type 2 diabetes (Ashcroft and Rorsman, 2012) which is compounded by insulin resistance. The interplay between beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance remains highly complex. The onset of hyperglycemia can trigger both beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance (Figure 1). Beta cell dysfunction is more severe than insulin resistance (Figure 1). With beta cell dysfunction, insulin secretion is impaired whereas with insulin resistance, insulin may still be secreted but insulin insensitivity manifests in target tissues. As beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance exacerbate, hyperglycemia amplifies leading to the progression to type 2 diabetes (Figure 1). This review focuses on beta cells: physiology and integrity, demise and dysfunction, compensation, and preservation.

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. Hyperglycemia-induced beta cell dysfunction, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes.

Beta Cell Physiology and Integrity

Adequate and proper beta cell function requires normal beta cell integrity which is critical for the appropriate response to perpetual fluctuating metabolic demand for insulin. Genes implicated in cell-cycle regulation are suggested to influence beta cell mass during development (Ashcroft and Rorsman, 2012). A decrease in beta cell mass of ≤60% has been reported in type 2 diabetes (Butler et al., 2003), which parallels the extent of reduction in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) (Del Guerra et al., 2005) but, however, considerably lower decrements have been found (Rahier et al., 2008). Although beta cell mass plays a role in type 2 diabetes, beta cell function rather than number is more critical in the etiology of type 2 diabetes (Ashcroft and Rorsman, 2012). Beta cells are resilient and will compensate to cope with insulin demand despite reduced numbers.

Under physiological conditions, the maintenance of blood glucose concentrations within a narrow physiological range relies on coordinated regulation of insulin secretion through nutrient availability, hormones, and neural inputs (Schrimpe-Rutledge et al., 2012). Amongst these factors, glucose is by far the most potent and physiologically important regulator of beta cell function through coordinated stimulation of insulin gene transcription, proinsulin biosynthesis, and insulin secretion from beta cells (Henquin et al., 2006). The highly coordinated regulation of gene and protein expression in response to glucose stimulation is responsible for many established cellular functions such as glycolysis and insulin biosynthesis/secretion, but also for unknown responses (Schrimpe-Rutledge et al., 2012). Glucose is a major regulator of transcription and translation in beta cells, an effect that is necessary for the long-term maintenance of the highly differentiated state of the cell and the secretory requirements imposed by prolonged elevations of glucose concentrations (Schuit et al., 2002). In addition, considering that beta cells are highly metabolically active and that insulin secretion is tightly coupled to glucose metabolism, the most highly glucose regulated proteins are implicated in glucose metabolism (Schrimpe-Rutledge et al., 2012). Glucose is therefore a critical determinant of beta cell function – persistent hyperglycemia may exhaust beta cells whereas hypostimulation may prime beta cells for low glycemic states (fasting and starvation) potentially limiting their response to hyperglycemic excursions.

Beta Cell Demise and Dysfunction

Beta cell insults include cytokine-induced inflammation, obesity and insulin resistance, and overconsumption of saturated fat and free fatty acids (FFA). A progressive decline of beta cell function leading to beta cell exhaustion precedes beta cell demise (Ferrannini, 2010; Talchai et al., 2012). Loss of beta cell mass and function are central to the development of both type 1 and 2 diabetes (Stoffers, 2004).

Cytokines, Oxidative Stress, Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress, and Inflammation

Specific proinflammatory cytokines induce an inflammatory response. Inflammation is associated with obesity and both are linked to insulin resistance. Proinflammatory cytokines cause beta cell death via the induction of mitochondrial stress and other responses (Cnop et al., 2005; Eizirik and Cnop, 2010; Gurgul-Convey et al., 2011). Cytokines secreted by immune cells that have infiltrated the pancreas are reported to be crucial mediators of beta cell destruction (Lin et al., 2012).

Chronic exposure hyperglycemia, leading to oxidative stress and inflammation, may induce changes in the regulation of gene expression that converge on impaired insulin secretion and increased apoptosis (Gilbert and Liu, 2012). Oxidative stress leads to damage in organelles, particularly the mitochondria and cellular proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids (Simmons, 2007); it also initiates and contributes to both endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress (Kaneto et al., 2005; Hotamisligil, 2010) and autophagy (Lee et al., 2012), although these mechanisms are not completely defined (Yuzefovych et al., 2013). ER stress is associated with beta cell apoptosis in type 2 diabetes (Marchetti et al., 2007).

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) are formed during both cytokine-mediated proinflammatory beta cell aggression in type 1 diabetes and glucolipotoxicity-mediated beta cell dysfunction in type 2 diabetes (Evans et al., 2003; Cnop et al., 2005; Robertson et al., 2007; Lenzen, 2008). Increased ROS production from mitochondrial overstimulation and RNS from excess nitric oxide (NO) production in beta cells leads to the inhibition of the electron transport chain resulting in reduced energy production, DNA damage, and the formation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) (Drews et al., 2010).

The limited glycolytic capacity of beta cells can generate ROS and the ensuing oxidative stress can uncouple glucose sensing from insulin secretion (Robertson, 2004). Beta cells are highly dependent on ATP production for GSIS and are vulnerable to excess ROS because of their inherently low expression of antioxidant enzymes (Simmons, 2007). The imbalance or reduced availability of nutrients to beta cells, small repeated increases in ROS production, lower ATP synthesis, and inadequate antioxidant balance may predispose to beta cell dysfunction (Reusens et al., 2011).

Obesity and Insulin Resistance

Obesity is a state of low grade inflammation. Adipose tissue is a major source of inflammation with the infiltration of macrophages as the primary source of cytokines in obese individuals (Stienstra et al., 2007). The beta cells secrete insulin to facilitate glucose uptake into glucose recipient organs (mainly the muscle, brain, liver, and adipose tissue). Obesity is a key risk factor for type 2 diabetes as it desensitizes glucose recipient organs to the action of insulin. Saturated fats are strongly associated with insulin resistance and beta cell dysfunction. High saturated fats in circulation, derived mainly from diets or even from lipolysis of fat depots, lead to fatty acids and glucose competing for uptake and metabolism in tissues. With persistent hyperglycemia, increased saturated FFA induce a glucolipotoxic state that is detrimental to beta cells by increasing oxidative stress, subsequently reducing insulin synthesis and secretion thereby compromising both beta cell structure and function.

The genetic architecture of quantitative indices of beta cell function and of insulin resistance differ markedly: given the same individuals, sample sizes, and biochemical measurements, more signals were described for beta cell function compared to insulin resistance (Dupuis et al., 2010; Voight et al., 2010). This infers that beta cell function supersedes insulin resistance as the critical determinant of type 2 diabetes. Further, as obesity is a critical determinant of insulin resistance, adiposity may modulate the genetic determinants of insulin resistance and contribute to the heterogeneity of type 2 diabetes (Manning et al., 2012). In addition, the adipokine hormones and proinflammatory cytokines that are produced by adipose tissue can influence insulin signaling via diverse mechanisms (Shoelson et al., 2006; Trujillo and Scherer, 2006) and these processes may interact with genetic variants influencing insulin resistance pathways (Manning et al., 2012). Adiposity levels have the potential to perturb the physiological milieu in which genetic variants in insulin signaling pathways operate (Manning et al., 2012). Therefore adiposity, and particularly fat in the pancreas and major glucose recipient organs, will exacerbate insulin resistance which consequently impairs beta cell function. Obesity also increases insulin demand therefore hyperfunction of beta cells may exhaust beta cells resulting in beta cell dysfunction.

By upregulating insulin secretion (Bergman, 2005) and the degree to which individuals are capable of achieving this determines whether or not an individual develops diabetes (Ashcroft and Rorsman, 2012). This, in turn, is influenced by their genetic constitution which explains why some obese and insulin resistant individuals do not develop type 2 diabetes; their beta cells can compensate (Ashcroft and Rorsman, 2012). In those individuals who develop diabetes, beta cell compensation declines due to hyperglycemia resulting in a persistent progressively increasing metabolic load that is influenced by factors such as aging and an increase in the number and severity of diabetogenic risk factors.

Saturated Fat and FFA Trigger Beta Cell Dysfunction and Insulin Resistance

Higher body mass indices (BMIs) may potentiate the effect of genetic variants on insulin resistance pathways, an effect that could be attributed to tissue-specific responses to the obesogenic environment (Prudente et al., 2009). The effects of FFA on beta cell function are time dependent. Short-term exposure to FFA increases GSIS which results in increased insulin secretion following a mixed meal and enables storage of excess calories as fat (Ashcroft and Rorsman, 2012) which contributes to overweight and obesity. FFA may account for the compensatory upregulation of beta cell function in response to insulin resistance (Stefanovski et al., 2011). Conversely, long-term exposure to FFA suppresses GSIS and has been suggested to involve impaired glucose metabolism, reduced insulin biosynthesis, and beta cell loss (Yaney and Corkey, 2003; Poitout and Robertson, 2008).

Obesity and high fat feeding mimic the effects of long-term incubation of islets with FFA on insulin secretion and Ca2+-channel distribution (Collins et al., 2010) which correlate with an increased amount of fat within the islets (Hoppa et al., 2009) and the surrounding exocrine pancreas (Pinnick et al., 2008). There is also an inverse correlation between the amount of fat in the human pancreas and GSIS, with glucose tolerance and insulin secretion improving in parallel with a reduction in pancreatic fat (Tushuizen et al., 2007). Intra-pancreatic or intra-islet fat depots may therefore provide a long-term local source of FFA that adversely affects beta cell function (Ashcroft and Rorsman, 2012). Obesity coupled to insulin resistance increases the functional demand per beta cell which would increase the burden and accelerate beta cell dysfunction. The pathogenesis of beta cell dysfunction may, to a certain extent, mimic hepatic steatosis: intra-tissue fat depots induce inflammation thereby triggering cellular demise and dysfunction. Intra-islet, in particular intra-beta cell, fat could therefore impair GSIS and insulin signaling in islets. This likely represents a mechanism for beta cell dysfunction and reduced beta cell compensation that impairs GSIS by non-glucose sensing by beta cells similar to impaired insulin signaling and consequently glucose uptake in glucose recipient tissues that triggers insulin resistance.

Islet inflammation (insulitis) in type 2 diabetes is attributed to nutrient overload leading to metabolic exhaustion in beta cells (Donath and Shoelson, 2011). This can lead to localized synthesis of cytokines, resulting in recruitment of immune cells to the site of production (Donath and Shoelson, 2011) which will trigger beta cell dysfunction and exacerbate insulin resistance. Nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B cells (NF-κB) has a central regulatory role in FFA-induced inflammation and beta cell death (Choi et al., 2012). The saturated FFA, palmitate, induces beta cell dysfunction in vivo by activating inflammatory processes within mouse islets (Eguchi et al., 2012). Palmitate treatment increased expression of major cytokines implicated in beta cell dysfunction (Choi et al., 2012), viz., interleukin (IL) 6, IL8 (CXCL1), IP10 [chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 10 (CXCL10)], MCP1 (CCL2), and MIP1A (CCL3) (Donath et al., 2010), where they may influence beta cells in an autocrine manner (Choi et al., 2012). Insulin sensitivity is impaired by saturated FFA and improved by polyunsaturated FFA (Siri-Tarino et al., 2010). In rats, saturated FFA have shown to increase intramuscular palmitic acid accumulation that may lead to insulin resistance (Reynoso et al., 2003). In humans, a positive association between serum FFA composition and diabetes was reported (Vessby et al., 1994; Coelho et al., 2011).

Beta Cell Compensation

Upon beta cell demise, beta cell compensation occurs to restore beta cell physiology. Optimal control of blood glucose concentrations depends on subtle changes in insulin synthesis and secretion by beta cells and on their capacity for large increases in secretion after meals, requiring large stores of insulin (Tarabra et al., 2012). It is critical that islets maintain adequate beta cell mass in response to various fluctuations in demand (Tarabra et al., 2012). Beta cell mass is enhanced by proliferation (replication of beta cells), neogenesis (differentiation from non-beta cells), hyperplasia (increased beta cell number) and hypertrophy (increased beta cell size), and is decreased by beta cell death; through apoptosis, necrosis, autophagy, and ferroptosis; hypoplasia (decreased beta cell number); and hypotrophy (decreased beta cell size). The expansion and demise of beta cell mass through stimulants and insults respectively are likely triggered through one or more of these processes of beta cell replenishment (beta cell expansion) and death (beta cell demise).

Proliferation refers to an increase in beta cells from beta cell replication (beta cell self-replenishment) whereas beta cell hyperplasia occurs by beta cell replication or beta cell neogenesis from non-beta cells. Both beta cell replication and neogenesis contribute to the expansion of beta cell mass and require external stimuli such as hormones and growth factors (Bouwens and Rooman, 2005). Beta cells are dynamic and altered in response to fluctuating metabolic demand for insulin. Beta cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia occur during beta cell compensation to increase beta cell mass in response to hyperglycemia in diabetogenic states (Cerf et al., 2012). In several insulin resistant and diabetic rodent models, most islets were mildly enlarged and displayed hypertrophy and hyperplasia (Jones et al., 2010). Further, beta cell hypertrophy contributes to beta cell compensation in high fat diet-induced insulin resistance and the master beta cell transcription factor, pancreatic duodenal homeobox 1 (Pdx1), regulates beta cell size (Sachdeva et al., 2009), i.e., Pdx1 influences beta cell hyper- or hypotrophy. In contrast, beta cell hypotrophy results from beta cell death via various processes and insults and contributes to reduced beta cell mass. In addition, beta cell hypotrophy was found in hyperglycemic weanling rats exposed to a high fat diet during any single week of gestation (Cerf et al., 2007). Hyperglycemia may be exacerbated by the inability of hypotrophic and hypoplastic beta cells to synthesize and secrete sufficient insulin which consequently results in hypoinsulinemia (Cerf et al., 2007).

In diabetes, reduced beta cell mass occurs through apoptosis, necrosis, autophagy, and potentially ferroptosis. In human type 2 diabetes, both increased apoptosis and reduced replication may contribute to beta cell loss and reduced beta cell mass (Karaca et al., 2009). Beta cell hyperplasia and hyperinsulinemia compensate for progressively increasing insulin resistance to maintain normoglycemia; with time apoptosis exceeds the rate of replication and beta cell mass declines (Kiraly et al., 2008). The cytokine, IL1, induces beta cell necrosis suggesting that macrophage-derived cytokines participate in the initial pathogenesis of diabetes by inducing beta cell death by a mechanism that promotes necrosis and islet inflammation (Steer et al., 2006). Autophagy, a catabolic process that involves the degradation of cellular components through the lysosomal machinery, is important for maintaining normal islet homeostasis and compensatory beta cell hyperplasia in response to high fat dietary intake (Ebato et al., 2008). In type 2 diabetic patients, increased beta cell death was associated with altered autophagy suggesting that autophagy can be induced by metabolic perturbations (Marchetti and Masini, 2009). The cell death process of ferroptosis is morphologically, biochemically, and genetically distinct from apoptosis, various forms of necrosis and autophagy, and is characterized by iron-dependent accumulation of lethal lipid ROS (Dixon et al., 2012). The role of ferroptosis in beta cell demise still requires elucidation.

Beta cells initially compensate for the insulin resistance associated with obesity by increasing insulin secretion (Kasuga, 2006). When beta cell loss reaches the point of causing hyperglycemia, the beta cell replication rate is presumably maximally stimulated; therefore a further elevation in glucose concentrations will not increase replication (Porat et al., 2011). Glucose homeostasis maintains normoglycemia by adapting the mass and function of beta cells that counter insulin resistance, reduced beta cell mass, and excess nutrition (Liu et al., 2001).

Glucose Potentiates Beta Cell Proliferation

The physiology of beta cells and insulin sensitive tissues are associated and mediated by metabolites, notably glucose. The beta cells compensate (adapt) in response to fluctuations in the demand for insulin. In states of increased insulin demand such as hyperglycemia, beta cells compensate to restore glucose homeostasis (maintain normoglycemia) via beta cell hypertrophy, and hyperplasia (to collectively increase beta cell mass) (Cerf, 2010) also increasing insulin biosynthesis (Brissova et al., 2005). Glucose increases the rate of beta cell proliferation in vitro (Kwon et al., 2004) and during short periods of glucose infusion in rodents (Bonner-Weir et al., 1989; Paris et al., 2003; Alonso et al., 2007) with glucose identified as the key systemic factor controlling beta cell replication (Porat et al., 2011). All beta cells appear to equally contribute to growth and maintenance (Brennand et al., 2007).

Beta Cell Trajectories

Beta cell mass is dynamic and can respond to environmental cues such as glucose and insulin (Paris et al., 2003). Beta cell number increases markedly in the first year of rodent life (Montanya et al., 2000; Dor et al., 2004), up to 1.5-fold during pregnancy (Van Assche et al., 1978; Scaglia et al., 1995) and up to 10-fold in insulin resistant states (Kulkarni et al., 2004).

When not constrained by persistent autoimmune attack or the toxicity of persistent hyperglycemia (glucotoxicity) (Ryu et al., 2001), beta cells inherently have the capacity to regenerate (Brennand et al., 2007). While the mechanism regulating beta cell expansion remains unclear, all beta cells are capable of replication (Brennand et al., 2007). Pluripotent stem cells also serve as sources of new beta cells. This however requires their defined terminal differentiation into functional beta cells which presents a major challenge.

In rodents, beta cell replication rates in young adult mice (12 week old) are highly variable from 2% (Finegood et al., 1995) to 15% per day (Teta et al., 2005). It was assumed that if 5% of beta cells replicate per day, and that all beta cells are equivalent, beta cells should divide approximately every 20 days (Brennand et al., 2007). However, using the range of 2–15% beta cell replication per day, and factoring in the median of a 8.5% replication rate, it is possible that beta cells can divide every 12 days, in physiological states, i.e., in the absence of any persistent hyperglycemic excursions. Altered metabolic states requiring increased insulin demand will alter beta cell replication rates.

Beta cell replication varies in humans and rodents. Human beta cells, unlike young rodent beta cells, are long-lived with little adaptive change during adulthood and are largely established by 20 years (Cnop et al., 2010). In humans, an age-related decrease of replicating cells reflects decreased adaptability (Reers et al., 2009). In young rodents (<1 year), the half-life of beta cells is estimated at 30–60 days (Finegood et al., 1995). In human adult beta cells, replication is estimated at 10-fold less than in adult mice (Butler et al., 2003, 2007) with the most replication in <5 year old children (Meier et al., 2008).

Beta Cell Proliferation: Mechanisms

During neonatal life, the endocrine pancreas undergoes substantial remodeling, which involves significant apoptosis, replication, and neogenesis of islet cells (Scaglia et al., 1997; Petrik et al., 1998; Bonner-Weir et al., 2010). Islet mass grows into adulthood to match increased hormonal demand (Zhang et al., 2012). In contrast, there is little change in islet mass in adults except in response to physiological and/or pathological changes such as pregnancy and obesity (Parsons et al., 1992; Weir et al., 2001), while adaptive islet cell proliferation is severely restricted in aged mice (Rankin and Kushner, 2009).

By GSIS, beta cells tightly regulate systemic glycemia within a narrow range. Insufficient functional beta cell mass is the causal factor of type 1 and a major contributor to type 2 diabetes, emphasizing the importance of understanding beta cell dynamics (Butler et al., 2003; Muoio and Newgard, 2008). In healthy adult mice, and in mice recovering from a diabetogenic injury, new beta cells are derived mainly by replication of pre-existing beta cells (Dor et al., 2004; Georgia and Bhushan, 2004; Brennand et al., 2007; Nir et al., 2007; Teta et al., 2007; Meier et al., 2008).

Signals controlling beta cell number may therefore act by modulating the survival and/or proliferation of differentiated beta cells (Porat et al., 2011). Food intake or glucose infusion increases beta cell replication in mice (Chick and Like, 1971; Chick, 1973; Bonner-Weir et al., 1989; Alonso et al., 2007) and insulin resistance results in a compensatory increase in beta cell mass (Kulkarni et al., 2004). There is evidence that systemic factors control beta cell proliferation, including the observation of beta cell hyperplasia in mice lacking insulin receptors in the liver (Michael et al., 2000; Kulkarni et al., 2004; Okada et al., 2007; Imai et al., 2008), and the demonstration that systemic factors in insulin resistant animals induce beta cell proliferation in islet grafts (Flier et al., 2001).

Uncontrolled beta cell proliferation will increase beta cell numbers and enhance the functional capacity. However, hypoglycemia could be a consequence of increased, uncontrolled beta cell proliferation due to an excess of beta cells, and the resultant over secretion of insulin. Further, increased beta cell numbers will occur at the expense of other islet cell types that secrete hormones antagonistic to insulin to also facilitate glucose homeostasis. Disrupting the islet cell population will limit the ability for maintaining glucose homeostasis. Apoptosis may also be potentiated to regulate uncontrolled proliferation. The balance between sustaining proliferation and evading apoptosis is critical for the initial beta cell compensatory response to normalize glycemia. This delicate shift to either physiological process has to adapt to metabolic demand. If this balance is disrupted to favor either process it would exacerbate the diabetogenic state.

Glucose can increase the rate of beta cell proliferation in vitro (Kwon et al., 2004) and during short periods of glucose infusion in vivo (rodents) (Bonner-Weir et al., 1989; Paris et al., 2003; Alonso et al., 2007). Insulin, FFA, and incretin hormones have also been proposed as beta cell proliferative agents, particularly in insulin resistant states where circulating glucose concentrations are not measurably elevated but several other beta cell mitogens are yet to be identified (Porat et al., 2011).

A recent study identified a simple mechanism for homeostasis of beta cell proliferation and mass where beta cells adjust their proliferation rate according to the rate of glycolysis; this provides a system for sensitive measurement of organismal demand for beta cells, while normoglycemia is maintained (Porat et al., 2011). The same homeostatic mechanism appears to be responsible for the control of beta cell number during healthy adult life and during regeneration following injury (Porat et al., 2011). Physiologically, this model explains how beta cell number can be finely adjusted according to the organism’s needs without deviating from the normoglycemic range (Porat et al., 2011).

The capacity of beta cells to proliferate in response to insulin resistance is critical for glucose homeostasis and for preventing the progression of type 2 diabetes (Blandino-Rosano et al., 2012). Proliferation of mature beta cells is one of the components responsible for maintenance of beta cell mass in adult life (Dor et al., 2004). A highly perfused subpopulation of islets demonstrated a higher rate of beta cell proliferation (Lau et al., 2012). Islet endothelial paracrine factors can increase beta cell proliferation (Lau et al., 2012) and the transcription factor, Islet 1, has been identified as crucial for sustained beta cell proliferation and the prevention of apoptosis in postnatal beta cells (Du et al., 2009). Tcf7l2 promotes beta cell proliferation, protects against apoptosis, and improves insulin secretion (Loder et al., 2008; Shu et al., 2008, 2009).

Beta cell proliferation progressively reduces with age. Adaptive beta cell proliferation is severely restricted with advanced age (Rankin and Kushner, 2009). In mice, beta cell regeneration, which occurs mainly by self-renewal, is severely and abruptly restricted by middle age (Rankin and Kushner, 2009). The regenerative capacity of adult beta cells becomes limited by early middle age (1 year, about 40% of the life span in mice) (Harrison and Archer, 1987). Beta cell replication may become fully restricted when adult insulin requirements are established in middle age (Rankin and Kushner, 2009). In human islets from donors aged 17–74 years, there was an age-related decreased expression of Pdx1 indicating both a decreased capacity with age for cellular proliferation (decreased plasticity) and reduced insulin formation and secretion (Maedler et al., 2006). A significantly higher incidence of beta cell neogenesis was observed in the premature and developing human pancreas (Gregg et al., 2012). Postnatally, human beta cell neogenesis was observed at a negligible rate of ≤0.5% in normal human pancreata with several rare instances of beta cell neogenesis observed at 1, 15, and 39 years (Gregg et al., 2012).

Beta Cell Preservation

Determinants of Beta Cell Preservation

Several recently identified factors regulate beta cells. These factors are involved in beta cell maintenance (mass, compensation, and function) and ultimately contribute to beta cell preservation. Beta cell preservation refers to the maintenance of both beta cell structure (integrity or architecture including beta cell mass, number, and size) and function (beta cell physiology).

Serum response factor (SRF), an essential regulator of myogenic and neurogenic genes, is highly enriched in beta cells and the insulin gene is a target of SRF (Sarkar et al., 2011). Insulin gene expression is glucose responsive; SRF is a glucose concentration sensitive regulator of insulin gene expression and may therefore play an important role in glucose homeostasis (Sarkar et al., 2011).

Alpha motif domain containing 4b/harmonin-interacting, ankyrin repeat-containing protein (Anks4b/Harp) is a target of HNF4α in beta cells (Sato et al., 2012). Anks4b interacts with glucose regulated protein 78 (GRP78), a major chaperone protein that protects cells from ER stress in vitro and in vivo (Sato et al., 2012). HNF4α plays an important role in the regulation of ER stress and apoptosis in beta cells (Sato et al., 2012). HNF4α and HNF1α regulate common target genes through interdependent regulatory mechanisms (Boj et al., 2010). Although the mechanism of the functional interaction between HNF4α and HNF1α is still unclear, Anks4b gene expression represents another example of such interdependent regulation (Sato et al., 2012). Anks4b is a target of HNF4α and uncovers a new role for this transcription factor in regulating beta cell susceptibility to ER stress (Sato et al., 2012).

Recently it was shown that uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) does not contribute to mitochondrial uncoupling in beta cells in intact islets (Robson-Doucette et al., 2011). However, there is growing evidence that implicates mitochondrial dysfunction in the pathophysiology of beta cell secretory failure (Mulder and Ling, 2009). Beta cell mitochondria serve as the fuel integrators of beta cells and generate signals for insulin secretion, the principal being ATP (Wikstrom et al., 2012). Therefore mitochondrial function predicts beta cell function as ATP is a key trigger for GSIS. The respiratory profile of human islets prior to transplantation into animal models may predict the transplantation outcome (Sweet et al., 2005, 2008; Papas et al., 2007); i.e., islets with high levels of oxygen consumption were more likely to reverse diabetes (Wikstrom et al., 2012).

The survival of beta cells in type 2 diabetes is particularly important as the disease is characterized by a progressive loss of beta cell numbers due to glucolipotoxicity (Shimabukuro et al., 1998; El-Assaad et al., 2003) and other insults. MIN6 cells express constitutively active peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPARγ) in the presence of high glucose (Rao et al., 2012). More interestingly however, the reversal of the effect by glucose and adiponectin to induce insulin release, provides a novel pathway by which adiponectin accentuates insulin secretion in MIN6 cells and increases insulin content (Rao et al., 2012).

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), the growth inhibitory peptide or glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP), the transcription factor paired box gene (Pax4), and the orphan nuclear liver receptor homolog 1 (LRH1) are factors that exert several beneficial actions on beta cells simultaneously such as conferring beta cell protection and enhancing proliferation (Mellado-Gil et al., 2012). In addition, some of these factors have been shown to improve beta cell function under pathophysiological conditions (Mellado-Gil et al., 2012). HGF and Pax4 both inhibit the NF-κB pathway leading to enhanced beta cell survival (Mellado-Gil et al., 2012). Similarly, GIP and Pax4 enhance expression of the anti-apoptotic gene bcl2 (Mellado-Gil et al., 2012). HGF and Pax4 also promote trans-differentiation of pancreatic ductal endothelial cells and alpha cells into beta cells (Mellado-Gil et al., 2012). This could be extremely beneficial as an alternative method to replenish functional beta cell mass due to the limited replication capacity of beta cells (Mellado-Gil et al., 2012). It is also interesting that alpha cells appear less susceptible to autoimmune attack with an apparent increase in the number of alpha cells in type 2 diabetic patients (Mellado-Gil et al., 2012). In this context, a combined HGF/c-met, Pax4, and GIP therapy could be optimal: beta cell protection with increased proliferation with the generation of new beta cells from alpha cells (Mellado-Gil et al., 2012).

The preservation of beta cell mass is crucial for islets to maintain normal glucose concentrations in the face of increasing glycemia and decreasing insulin sensitivity (Rao et al., 2012). The functional significance of activating PPARγ using thiazolidinedione (TZD) therapy in type 2 diabetes is to prevent beta cell apoptosis as these compounds enhance beta cell survival in diabetic patients (Ovalle and Bell, 2002; Pelzer et al., 2005). The PPARγ agonist rosiglitazone prevents beta cell death in db/db mice and Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rats (Finegood et al., 2001). However, the critical determinant is whether these preserved beta cells are fully functional, have compromised function or are redundant. Preserving beta cells that are not fully functional, i.e., respond properly and promptly to insulin demands, will compound beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance. These cells will occupy the space of fully functional beta cells thereby compromising collective insulin synthesis and secretion.

Because replenishing lost beta cells provides a potential cure for diabetes, identifying molecules capable of inducing endocrine cell differentiation in animal models and elucidating their mechanism of action are particularly valuable for diabetes research (Wang et al., 2008). The transcription factors, myelin transcription factor (Myt1) and neurogenin (Ngn3), form a feed-forward expression loop to promote the differentiation of most if not all endocrine cells (Wang et al., 2008) and therefore present a starting point for beta cell replenishment.

Some physiological processes also prime beta cells for survival such as dedifferentiation and autophagy. To avoid demise, beta cells dedifferentiate, and at a later stage, resume their beta cell identity and function. Beta cell dedifferentiation is the regression to an endocrine progenitor-like stage rather than a degenerative stage (Talchai et al., 2012). By adopting the dedifferentiated fate, beta cells enhance their survival (Talchai et al., 2012). There is ample time for transition between functional depletion of insulin in beta cells and their demise that may allow the salvaging of dedifferentiated beta cells; this presents a novel approach for treating beta cell dysfunction in diabetes (Talchai et al., 2012).

Autophagy is a pathway for cells to degrade organelles and is an adapted mechanism for cells to reduce ROS (Scherz-Shouval and Elazar, 2011) and eliminate ER stress (Ding et al., 2007). This catabolic process involves the degradation of cellular components through the lysosomal machinery and is important for maintaining normal islet homeostasis and compensatory beta cell hyperplasia (Ebato et al., 2008). Autophagy plays a key role in the protection of beta cells from apoptosis, stabilizing beta cell structure, and maintaining beta cell function (Hur et al., 2010; Las and Shirihai, 2010). However, in human type 2 diabetes, autophagy can also contribute to loss of beta cell mass (Masini et al., 2009). Thus, whether autophagy plays a protective role or harms beta cells requires further investigation (Wu et al., 2013).

Novel Treatments

Treatments for beta cell dysfunction should strive to ameliorate beta cell structure and/or function, stimulate beta cell proliferation to enhance beta cell mass and thereby allow compensation to restore and/or maintain beta cell function. This ultimately maintains glucose homeostasis. A recent study emphasized the potential importance of analyzing molecular pathways to identify potential therapeutic targets (Koulmanda et al., 2012). Therapeutic strategies aimed at repopulating insulin-producing cells show great potential for restoring glycemia in diabetes (Feng et al., 2012). Factors should not be studied in isolation but rather collectively to mimic physiology.

c-Kit is important in the development and function of islets, especially in support of beta cell proliferation, maturation, and survival (Oberg et al., 1994; Oberg-Welsh and Welsh, 1996; LeBras et al., 1998; Welsh et al., 2000; Rachdi et al., 2001; Yashpal et al., 2004; Li et al., 2007). c-Kit overexpression in beta cells confers improved glucose metabolism by enhancing insulin secretion and increases beta cell mass and proliferation, probably through the activation of the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)-Akt signaling pathway (Feng et al., 2012).

Mimitin, a small 20 kDa mitochondrial protein and direct target of c-myc, is involved in cell proliferation (Tsuneoka et al., 2005) and can act as a modulator of GSIS and prevent its inhibition by proinflammatory cytokines (Hanzelka et al., 2012).

Adiponectin is capable of increasing MIN6 cell proliferation (Rao et al., 2012). Adiponectin increased MIN6 cell number in 25 mM glucose but had no effect on MIN6 cell proliferation in 3 mM glucose (Rao et al., 2012). This demonstrated that hyperglycemia was required for increasing proliferation. Adiponectin also has positive effects on MIN6 cell proliferation via pathways unrelated to PPARγ activation (Rao et al., 2012).

Exenatide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonist, enhances beta cell function and survival during culture conditions used in clinical islet transplantation which presents a feasible approach to preserve beta cells during pre-transplant islet culture (Park et al., 2013).

Epoxyoukalide, a marine product, protected against basal and cytokine-induced apoptosis, maintained beta cell function, and induced beta cell proliferation mediated by extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK1/2) activation and targets, cyclin D2, and cyclin R (Lopez-Acosta et al., 2013).

Insulin secretion in the presence of resveratrol is increased in various pancreatic beta cell cultures (Chen et al., 2007). Phenolic compounds potentially positively preserve beta cells and their function (Lin et al., 2012). Quercetin and naringenin possibly protect beta cells from cytokine-induced toxicity by enhancing cell survival through the PI3K pathway, independent of p-p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK), or inducible NO synthase (iNOS) as demonstrated in INS-1 cells (Lin et al., 2012). In addition, quercetin and naringenin induce pAkt activation and could further participate in beta cell protection from cytokine-induced cell apoptosis, possibly by a NO-independent mechanism and could be potent agents to benefit beta cell mass preservation (Lin et al., 2012).

Healthy Diet and Regular Exercise

A healthy normocaloric diet that is well balanced, limited in saturated fat content, and meets the recommended daily allowances of key nutrients protects beta cells and enhances longevity in healthy individuals. Reduced energy intake combined with exercise improves insulin sensitivity (Weickert, 2012). Additional dietary measures that reduce insulin resistance include ingesting a Mediterranean dietary pattern that avoids excess dietary fat intake; substituting saturated fatty acids and trans fatty acids with monounsaturated fatty acids and polyunsaturated fatty acids, emphasizing cereal fiber content in the diet and when on a high protein diet, maintaining high levels of exercise (Weickert, 2012). Patients with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes who were placed on a hypocaloric diet for up to 12 weeks experienced a marked and rapid decrease in liver fat content (85%), associated specifically with normalization in hepatic insulin sensitivity and reductions in fasting hyperglycemia and hepatic glucose production without changes in intramyocellular lipid or insulin-mediated whole body glucose disposal (Petersen et al., 2005).

Regular exercise, although it may not necessarily reduce weight, enhances insulin sensitivity. Importantly, exercise concomitant with weight loss improves beta cell function (Dela et al., 2004; Solomon et al., 2010). Exercise maintained or enhanced beta cell function in older obese individuals, with improved beta cell function correlating with reduced glucose concentrations (Malin and Kirwan, 2012). In the ZDF rat, voluntary running prevented the development of diabetes despite continuing hyperphagia, obesity, and hyperlipidemia (Delghingaro-Augusto et al., 2012). Compensatory insulin secretion was preserved and hyperglycemia prevented by exercise was characterized by enhanced insulin secretion per islet and the prevention of severe depletion of islet insulin stores (Delghingaro-Augusto et al., 2012). Frequent exercise and adopting a healthy diet is a strategy to improve diabetic outcomes, particularly in pre-diabetic states such as obesity and/or insulin resistance and beta cell dysfunction.

Beta Cell Proliferation and Compensation Counters Beta Cell Demise and Dysfunction but Promotes Beta Cell Preservation

Cytokine-mediated oxidative stress and inflammation, inherent in obesity and insulin resistance, induces beta cell death therefore the beta cell population declines contributing to the manifestation of beta cell dysfunction (Figure 2). Similarly peripheral FFA-induced inflammation, as in obesity and insulin resistance, leads to beta cell destruction and dysfunction (Figure 2). Further, within the pancreas, saturated FFA induce islet inflammation and increase cytokine expression in beta cells thereby inducing beta cell dysfunction.

FIGURE 2
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Figure 2. Beta cell proliferation and compensation counters beta cell demise and dysfunction but promotes beta cell survival. Factors are encircled; proliferating factors are in bold.

Metabolites, hormones, and transcription factors stimulate beta cell proliferation to sustain beta cell compensation (Figure 2). Beta cell compensation is a critical intervention process: it both inhibits beta cell demise and dysfunction; and protects beta cell structure and function (Figure 2).

Proliferative agents, novel compounds, and healthy lifestyles help to preserve beta cells by maintaining beta cell integrity and function (Figure 2). Therefore with an adequate (and functional) beta cell population, beta cell physiology is maintained. Apart from feeding beta cell compensation, beta cell proliferation also restores beta cell population (when replenishment > death) thereby contributing to beta cell maintenance.

Perspectives on Beta Cell Dysfunction and Insulin Resistance

Beta cell dysfunction signals an advanced state of diabetes as insufficient insulin is secreted to meet demand. Insulin resistance precedes the pathogenesis for several modern diseases (Samuel and Shulman, 2012). Thus understanding the pathogenesis of insulin resistance has become increasingly important to guide the development of future therapies and inform health and economic policy (Samuel and Shulman, 2012).

The relationship between insulin resistance and beta cell dysfunction is dynamic and largely dependent on the metabolic state that is primarily determined by glycemic status and consequently insulinemic status. Both a high fat diet and obesity trigger insulin resistance independently, with a high fat diet contributing to overweight and obesity (Figure 3). In the etiology of beta cell dysfunction, firstly, beta cell physiology is maintained in healthy individuals (Figure 3). However, glucolipotoxicity and proinflammatory cytokines induce oxidative stress leading to beta cell demise, although other stressors exist (Figure 3). Beta cell compensation occurs when beta cell integrity is diminished. If beta cell compensation is successful, beta cell physiology is maintained (Figure 3). However if beta cell compensation is exhausted, beta cell dysfunction ensues (Figure 3). Insulin resistance impairs beta cell physiology and compensation thereby inducing beta cell demise and dysfunction. Beta cell replenishment and preservation, through novel agents, healthy lifestyles of balanced diets and regular exercise, maintains beta cell physiology, and compensation (when necessary) therefore protecting against beta cell demise and dysfunction (Figure 3). The main intervention strategy is to maintain sufficient beta cell compensation to restore and maintain beta cell physiology to avoid beta cell dysfunction and the subsequent progression to diabetes. This is achieved by maintaining adequate beta cell preservation, i.e., by preserving beta cell structure and function, and replenishment by lifestyle and, if necessary, therapeutic interventions.

FIGURE 3
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Figure 3. Beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance dynamics.

Beta cell physiology should be preserved throughout life but is adversely impacted with aging and altered metabolic states such as obesity that requires a sustained increase in insulin. Insulin resistance promotes beta cell demise and inhibits beta cell compensation which thereby promotes beta cell dysfunction. Replenishing or preserving beta cells maintains beta cell physiology and allows for beta cell compensation which combats beta cell demise and beta cell dysfunction. The preservation of beta cells by replenishment to mitigate against insults and maintain beta cell physiology will improve the metabolic outcomes associated with diabetes.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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Keywords: beta cell compensation, diabetes, obesity, oxidative stress, proliferation

Citation: Cerf ME (2013) Beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance. Front. Endocrinol. 4:37. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2013.00037

Received: 21 December 2012; Paper pending published: 16 January 2013;
Accepted: 10 March 2013; Published online: 27 March 2013.

Edited by:

Soroku Yagihashi, Hirosaki University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan

Reviewed by:

Hiroki Mizukami, Hirosaki University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan
Naoto Kubota, University of Tokyo, Japan

Copyright: © 2013 Cerf. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and subject to any copyright notices concerning any third-party graphics etc.

*Correspondence: Marlon E. Cerf, Diabetes Discovery Platform, South African Medical Research Council, PO Box 19070, Tygerberg, Cape Town 7505, South Africa. e-mail: marlon.cerf@mrc.ac.za

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.