Open Access
Open access
Science advances, volume 8, issue 38

The adipocyte-enriched secretory protein tetranectin exacerbates type 2 diabetes by inhibiting insulin secretion from β cells

Fen Liu 1
Zixin Cai 1
Yan Yang 1
George Plasko 2
Piao Zhao 3
Xiangyue Wu 3
Cheng Tang 3
Dandan Li 1
Ting Li 4
SHANBIAO HU 5
Lei Song 5
Shaojie Yu 5
Ran Xu 6
Hairong Luo 1
Libin Fan 1
Ersong Wang 7
Zhen Xiao 3
Yujiao Ji 1
Rong Zeng 8
Rongxia Li 8
Juli Bai 1, 2
Zhiguang Zhou 1
Feng Liu 1
Jingjing Zhang 1
Show full list: 24 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-09-23
Journal: Science advances
scimago Q1
SJR4.483
CiteScore21.4
Impact factor11.7
ISSN23752548
Multidisciplinary
Abstract

Pancreatic β cell failure is a hallmark of diabetes. However, the causes of β cell failure remain incomplete. Here, we report the identification of tetranectin (TN), an adipose tissue–enriched secretory molecule, as a negative regulator of insulin secretion in β cells in diabetes. TN expression is stimulated by high glucose in adipocytes via the p38 MAPK/TXNIP/thioredoxin/OCT4 signaling pathway, and elevated serum TN levels are associated with diabetes. TN treatment greatly exacerbates hyperglycemia in mice and suppresses glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in islets. Conversely, knockout of TN or neutralization of TN function notably improves insulin secretion and glucose tolerance in high-fat diet–fed mice. Mechanistically, TN binds with high selectivity to β cells and inhibits insulin secretion by blocking L-type Ca 2+ channels. Our study uncovers an adipocyte–β cell cross-talk that contributes to β cell dysfunction in diabetes and suggests that neutralization of TN levels may provide a new treatment strategy for type 2 diabetes.

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