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Mechanism and effects of pulsatile GABA secretion from cytosolic pools in the human beta cell.

Danusa MenegazD Walker HaganJoana AlmaçaChiara CianciarusoRayner Rodriguez-DiazJudith MolinaRobert M DolanMatthew W BeckerPetra C SchwalieRita NanoFanny LebretonChen KangRajan SahHerbert Y GaisanoPer-Olof BerggrenSteinunn BaekkeskovAlejandro CaicedoEdward A Phelps
Published in: Nature metabolism (2019)
Pancreatic beta cells synthesize and secrete the neurotransmitter γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) as a paracrine and autocrine signal to help regulate hormone secretion and islet homeostasis. Islet GABA release has classically been described as a secretory vesicle-mediated event. Yet, a limitation of the hypothesized vesicular GABA release from islets is the lack of expression of a vesicular GABA transporter in beta cells. Consequentially, GABA accumulates in the cytosol. Here we provide evidence that the human beta cell effluxes GABA from a cytosolic pool in a pulsatile manner, imposing a synchronizing rhythm on pulsatile insulin secretion. The volume regulatory anion channel (VRAC), functionally encoded by LRRC8A or Swell1, is critical for pulsatile GABA secretion. GABA content in beta cells is depleted and secretion is disrupted in islets from type 1 and type 2 diabetic patients, suggesting that loss of GABA as a synchronizing signal for hormone output may correlate with diabetes pathogenesis.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • endothelial cells
  • type diabetes
  • single cell
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • cell death
  • cell therapy
  • poor prognosis
  • stem cells
  • metabolic syndrome
  • weight loss