Abstract
Insulin controls glucose homeostasis by regulating glucose use in peripheral tissues, and its own production and secretion in pancreatic β cells1,2,3. These responses are largely mediated downstream of the insulin receptor substrates, IRS-1 and IRS-2 (refs 4,5,6,7,8), through distinct signalling pathways. Although a number of effectors of these pathways have been identified, their roles in mediating glucose homeostasis are poorly defined9. Here we show that mice deficient for S6 kinase 1, an effector of the phosphatidylinositide-3-OH kinase signalling pathway9, are hypoinsulinaemic and glucose intolerant. Whereas insulin resistance is not observed in isolated muscle, such mice exhibit a sharp reduction in glucose-induced insulin secretion and in pancreatic insulin content. This is not due to a lesion in glucose sensing or insulin production, but to a reduction in pancreatic endocrine mass, which is accounted for by a selective decrease in β-cell size. The observed phenotype closely parallels those of preclinical type 2 diabetes mellitus, in which malnutrition-induced hypoinsulinaemia predisposes individuals to glucose intolerance10,11,12.
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Acknowledgements
We thank T. Gremeaux and P. Kopf for expert technical assistance, and M. Rothnie, R. Scriwaneck and T. van Rijn for their help in the rapid and high-quality production of photographic materials. We also thank C. Bendotti for help with statistical analysis. We are grateful to D. Withers, P. Caroni, S. Volarevic, G. Posthuma, J. Slot, H. Geuze, L. Hansen, S. Oldham and W. Krek for reading the manuscript and helpful discussions, and to the members of the Thomas laboratory for support. M.P. is a recipient of a stipend from the EEC and these studies were supported in part by grants from INSERM and Foundation pour la Recherché Medicale to Y.L-B., from the Swiss National Science Foundation to B.T. and from the EEC, HFSPO and Novartis Foundation to G.T.
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Pende, M., Kozma, S., Jaquet, M. et al. Hypoinsulinaemia, glucose intolerance and diminished β-cell size in S6K1-deficient mice. Nature 408, 994–997 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1038/35050135
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/35050135
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