Destabilization of β-cell FIT2 by saturated fatty acids contribute to ER stress and diabetes

2021 
Western type diets are linked to obesity and diabetes partly because of their high saturated fatty acid (SFA) content. We found that SFAs, but not unsaturated fatty acids (USFAs), reduced the number of lipid droplets (LDs) within pancreatic {beta}-cells. Mechanistically, SFAs but not USFAs disabled LD biogenesis by inducing palmitoylation and subsequent ERAD-C mediated degradation of LD formation protein, Fat storage-Inducing Transmembrane protein 2 (FIT2). Targeted ablation of FIT2 reduced {beta}-cell LD numbers, lowered {beta}-cell ATP levels, reduced Ca2+ signaling, downregulated {beta}-cell transcription factors (RNA sequencing analysis), and exacerbated diet-induced diabetes in mice. Subsequent mass spectrometry studies revealed increased C16:0 ceramide accumulation in islets of mice lacking {beta}-cell FIT2 under lipotoxic conditions. Inhibition of ceramide synthases ameliorated the enhanced ER stress. Overexpression of FIT2 increased number of intracellular LDs and rescued SFA-induced ER-stress and apoptosis thereby highlighting the protective role of FIT2 and LDs against {beta}-cell lipotoxicity and diet-induced diabetes.
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