Polymorphisms in the human TCF7L2 gene are associated with reduced insulin secretion and an increased risk of type 2 diabetes. However, the mechanisms by which TCF7L2 affect insulin secretion are still unclear. We define the effects of TCF7L2 expression level on mature β-cell function and suggest a potential mechanism for its actions.
TCF7L2 expression in rodent islets and β-cell lines was altered using RNAi or adenoviral transduction. β-Cell gene profiles were measured by quantitative real-time PCR and the effects on intracellular signaling and exocytosis by live cell imaging, electron microscopy, and patch clamp electrophysiology.
Reducing TCF7L2 expression levels by RNAi decreased glucose- but not KCl-induced insulin secretion. The glucose-induced increments in both ATP/ADP ratio and cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) were increased compared with controls. Overexpression of TCF7L2 exerted minor inhibitory effects on glucose-regulated changes in [Ca2+]i and insulin release. Gene expression profiling in TCF7L2-silenced cells revealed increased levels of mRNA encoding syntaxin 1A but decreased Munc18–1 and ZnT8 mRNA. Whereas the number of morphologically docked vesicles was unchanged by TCF7L2 suppression, secretory granule movement increased and capacitance changes decreased, indicative of defective vesicle fusion.
CONCLUSION—TCF7L2 is involved in maintaining expression of β-cell genes regulating secretory granule fusion. Defective insulin exocytosis may thus underlie increased diabetes incidence in carriers of the at-risk TCF7L2 alleles.
Type 2 diabetes is the most common metabolic disease in industrialized societies (1). The disease has a complex etiology involving interplay between environmental risk factors (obesogenic diet, lack of exercise) and a susceptible genetic background (2). Although the hereditary nature of type 2 diabetes has been acknowledged for many years (3), only recently have candidate gene studies (4,–6) and whole genome association approaches (7,,–10) identified polymorphisms in 12 specific gene loci that increase disease risk. These, and an earlier candidate gene study (11), identified single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), including SNP rs7903146, in the third intron of the gene encoding transcription factor 7-like 2 (TCF7L2; also known as transcription factor 4) as strongly associated with type 2 diabetes in different ethnic backgrounds (9,,,–13). rs7903146 has been estimated to contribute to 10 to 25% of all cases of diabetes in lean individuals (14).
TCF7L2 is a member of the T-cell–specific high-mobility group box-containing family of transcription factors that, on binding β-catenin, transduces signals generated by Wnt receptors at the cell surface to modify expression of multiple genes, many of which are associated with the cell cycle (15). Mutations in TCF7L2 are also implicated in certain types of cancer (16).
Recent clinical studies have demonstrated that the at-risk SNP is associated with maintained insulin sensitivity (HOMA-B) but defects in β-cell function and insulin release (17). Because the SNP is found in an intronic region, a potential mechanism through which it may confer an increased risk of diabetes is by altering TCF7L2 expression levels. A recent study by Lyssenko and colleagues (18) suggested that pancreatic islets from patients with type 2 diabetes bearing the at-risk TT allele have increased TCF7L2 RNA levels, indicating that excessive TCF7L2 expression may be associated with the reported insulin-secretory defects. Expression studies carried out by Elbein and colleagues (19) on adipose tissue and muscle showed that TCF7L2 expression was not altered by genotype and did not correlate with insulin sensitivity or BMI. TCF7L2 mRNA levels in subcutaneous white adipose tissue from TT-bearing individuals were decreased compared with those in control (CC-bearing) individuals (20,21). At present, data on TCF7L2 expression levels in individuals carrying the at-risk allele are inconclusive, and given the possibility of alternate splicing, it remains to be established how the level of active TCF7L2 is altered.
Homozygous tcf7l2 knockout mice die shortly after birth with profound changes in gut development involving failed conversion of the endoderm to epithelial progenitors (22). Although detailed morphometric analyses have yet to be reported, pancreatic development is grossly normal in homozygous mutant mice (22). A recent study in isolated human islets demonstrated that RNAi-mediated depletion of TCF7L2 mRNA led to ablation of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and increased β-cell apoptosis (23). To date, the mechanisms through which functional TCF7L2 modulates glucose sensing and insulin release in pancreatic β-cells are unknown.
We provide a detailed investigation of the effects of altering TCF7L2 content on β-cell function and on the expression of genes pivotal to β-cell glucose sensing. We show that silencing of TCF7L2 in primary mouse islets as well as in clonal MIN6 and INS-1(832/13) cells decreases both basal- and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. TCF7L2 silencing also abolished the stimulatory effects of GLP-1 on secretion while having little impact on glucose-induced changes in intracellular ATP or free Ca2+ concentrations. We also show that TCF7L2 controls the expression of genes involved in insulin granule fusion at the plasma membrane. These changes may underlie defective insulin secretion in β-cells lacking TCF7L2.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
All reagents were purchased from Sigma (Poole, U.K.) or GIBCO-BRL (Paisley, U.K.) unless otherwise stated. Mouse monoclonal antibody for TCF7L2 was purchased from Abnova (Taiwan).
Culture of MIN6 and INS-1(832/13) β-cell lines.
MIN6 β-cells were used between passages 19 and 30 and cultured as previously described (24). INS-1(832/13) cells were cultured as described (25). Cells were transfected with plasmids and siRNA using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen, Paisley, U.K.) or TransIT-TKO (Mirus Bio Corporation, Madison, WI), respectively, according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Isolation and culture of mouse islets.
Islets were isolated from female CD1 mice and cultured as described (26).
TCF7L2 silencing.
siRNA against mouse and rat TCF7L2 (sense-AAGAAGCCCCTTAATGCATTCCTGTCTC, antisense-AATGCATTAAGGGGCTTCTTTCCTGTCTC) and control siRNA (sense-AACCCGCAATTTAGAAGCATTCCTGTCTC, antisense-AATGCTTCTAAATTGCGGGTTCCTGTCTC) were designed according to criteria set out by Tuschl and associates (http://www.rockefeller.edu/labheads/tuschl/sirna.html and references therein) and synthesized using Ambion's Silencer siRNA kit (Ambion, Austin, TX). Fluorescein-labeled siRNA duplexes of these sequences were from Sigma Genosys. Enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-tagged shRNA, based on the previously mentioned siRNA, was synthesized by annealing oligonucleotides containing the sequences for scrambled or TCF7L2 shRNA into pcDNA6.2/GW/mir-EGFP (Invitrogen).
Overexpression of TCF7L2 in rodent β-cells.
Human TCF7L2 cDNA (OriGene Technologies) was cloned into pEGFP-N1. TCF7L2-EGFP adenovirus was generated as previously described (http://www.coloncancer.org/adeasy.htm). Cells were infected with control or TCF7L2-EGFP adenovirus at 100 MOI for 48 h before experiments.
Real-time PCR analysis.
Primers for real-time PCR analysis were designed using Primer Express 3.0 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) using mRNA sequences for mouse and rat on the Ensembl database (http://www.ensembl.org/). Sequence specificity for all primers was verified using BLAST (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/). Real time-PCR was performed on an ABI-Prism Fast 7500 device (Applied Biosystems) using powerSYBR reagent (Applied Biosystems).
Insulin secretion.
Mouse islets and clonal cell lines were cultured in the presence of siRNA (1 nmol/l or 10 nmol/l, respectively) for 48 h before insulin secretion assay in Krebs-Ringer Bicarbonate Buffer (KRB; 125 mmol/l NaCl, 3.5 mmol/l KCl, 1.5 mmol/l CaCl2, 0.5 mmol/l NaH2PO4, 0.5 mmol/l MgSO4, 3 mmol/l glucose, 10 mmol/l HEPES, and 2 mmol/l NaHCO3, pH 7.4, and equilibrated with O2/CO2 [95:5] and supplemented with 0.1% [wt/vol] BSA) (26,27). Secreted insulin was measured by radioimmunoassay (LINCO/Millipore, St. Charles, MO).
Intracellular [Ca2+] imaging.
INS-1(832/13) cells or mouse islets were transduced 48 h before assay. INS-1(832/13) cells (incubated overnight in media containing 3 mmol/l glucose) or dispersed islets were incubated for 30 min in KRB containing 3 mmol/l glucose and 200 nmol/l FURA-RED AM (Invitrogen). Cells were stimulated using the conditions indicated and excited at 480/440 nm using an Olympus IX-81 microscope coupled to an F-view camera and captured using CellR̂ software (Olympus, Hertfordshire, U.K.) with a 40× oil objective. Data were expressed as the ratio of the fluorescence emission at 440/480 nm. The AUC was calculated using OriginPro7.5 software (OriginLab, Northampton, MA) and statistical tests by ANOVA using GraphPad Prism 4.0 (GraphPad Software).
Dual-color total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy.
Transfected MIN6 cells were imaged at 30°C in KRB with 3 mmol/l glucose using a custom-built lens-type TIRF microscope based on an inverted stand (Axiovert 200M; Carl Zeiss) and equipped with a 100×/1.45 Apo lens (Carl Zeiss). Cells were excited using DPSS lasers (473 nm, 80 mW [EGFP] and 555 nm, 25 mW [mCherry]; Crystalasers) Emitted light was separated using a double dichroic (59022 bs) magnified with an Optovar 1.6 (Carl Zeiss) and split into two channels using an image splitter (DualView; Optical Insights, Santa Fe, NM) with a dichroic cutoff at 585 nm (T585LP) and bandpass filters 595 to 670 nm (ET630-75) and 485 to 550 nm (ET517/65M). All filters were from Chroma. Separate images of the two channels were taken on a CCD camera (Cascade 512B; Roper Scientific, Trenton, NJ, or iXonEM + DU-897; Andor Technology, Belfast, U.K.).
Cells were selected based on green fluorescence and morphology. Granules were detected automatically with an in-house algorithm written as a MetaMorph journal. The image was subjected to morphological tophat, H-Dome, and dilate operations before internal thresholding and counting of objects. A threshold was set by the operator once for the entire dataset.
Granule dynamics.
All granule tracks were selected for each time period using an Image J software particle tracker. The movement of each granule between frames was then analyzed according to the equation √([x2 − x1] [2] + [y2 − y1] [2]) and converted to microns per second generating a range of granule movement velocities. The results were expressed as the number of movements occurring at each velocity. Two distinct subgroups of granules were observed (fixed and moving), and analysis of the percentage of granules in each subgroup was determined by curve fitting to two sites (Origin Software).
Confocal microscopy.
Paraformaldehyde (4% wt/vol) fixed INS-1(832/13) cells previously transfected with either pEGFP-N1 or TCF7L2-pEGFP-N1 were imaged using a Zeiss Axiovert 200M microscope fitted with a PlanApo ×63 oil-immersion objective and a 1.5× optivar. Sample illumination at 345 and 492 nm and data acquisition were controlled with an Improvision/Nokigawa spinning disc system running Volocity (Improvision, Coventry, U.K.) software.
Total adenine nucleotide measurements.
Electron microscopy.
Isolated islets were treated with siRNA and glucose as for secretion assays described previously and then fixed in formaldehyde-glutaraldehyde for 30 min at 37°C and postfixed in 1.0% osmium tetroxide. Samples were processed for embedding in epon. Serial ultrathin 80-nm sections were poststained with saturated methanolic uranyl acetate and Reynold's lead citrate and observed with a transmission electron microscope (Tecnai G2 Spirit–FEI Company) at an operating voltage of 120 kV. Images were collected using TEM v3.1 software (FEI Company) at a magnification of ×2,700 with a 2k × 2k CCD camera (Eagle; FEI Company). Islets were sectioned at 20 μm and 40 μm from the surface and four cells imaged per section. All imaging was carried out blind to treatment condition.
Analysis of electron microscopy images.
Morphologically docked granules were defined using criteria previously described (30). To control for variations in cell size resulting from the plane of section, the length of plasma membrane was measured and the data expressed as granules per micron. Total granule content was defined as the granule number per micron squared of cytosol. Statistical analysis was by ANOVA with Bonferroni post hoc analysis.
Electrophysiology.
Electrical capacitance (Cm) and Ca2+ current (ICa) through the plasma membrane of β-cells were recorded using a EPC9 patch-clamp amplifier controlled by Pulse software (HEKA Elektronik, Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany) in standard whole-cell configuration. Single β-cells from dispersed mouse islets were transfected with fluorescein-labeled siRNA as described for Ca2+ imaging.
Cells were voltage-clamped at −70 mV, and exocytosis was elicited by trains of 200, 500, or 2,500 ms depolarizations to 10 mV essentially as previously described (31). Noise reduction (1-D quadratic Loess) and data analysis were performed using IgorPro software (Wavemetrics, Lake Oswego, OR).
Data are given as means ± SE of three to six individual experiments. Unless otherwise described, comparisons between means were performed using Student's t test with Microsoft Excel.
RESULTS
Impact of TCF7L2 silencing on regulated insulin secretion.
The presence of TCF7L2 mRNA and protein was confirmed in mouse islets, MIN6 (mouse) and INS-1(832/13) (rat) clonal β-cells (Fig. 1,A–C, respectively) consistent with the reported expression of this protein in human islets (18,23). Endogenous TCF7L2 mRNA levels did not change in response to changing glucose concentrations in MIN6 and INS-1(832/13) cells (Fig. 1,B and C). Of three siRNAs designed against TCF7L2, one provided substantial knockdown (76 ± 0.2%, n = 3 versus scrambled siRNA-treated cells) in TCF7L2 immunoreactivity in mouse islets (Fig. 1,A) after 48 h of siRNA treatment and near total ablation of TCF7L2 immunoreactivity in MIN6 (Fig. 1,B) and INS-1(832/13) (Fig. 1 C) β-cells.
Silencing of TCF7L2 in mouse islets had no significant effect on total islet insulin content (74.9 ± 4.4 versus 69.7 ± 3.2 ng/islet, n = 3; 54 islets per condition), but resulted in a decrease in both the basal (3 mmol/l) and glucose stimulated (11 mmol/l) insulin release (Fig. 1,A). Similar changes were seen in two β-cell lines (Fig. 1,B and C) in concurrence with studies in human islets (23). By contrast, insulin release stimulated by cell depolarization with high concentrations of K+ (30–50 mmol/l) was unaffected in islets (Fig. 1,A) and INS-1(832/13) cells (Fig. 1,C), implying a defect in metabolic signaling in response to elevated glucose (32) or a depletion of pool(s) of secretory granules with relatively high Ca2+ sensitivity (33). Whereas basal total cellular ATP and ADP levels were lower in TCF7L2-silenced mouse islets, glucose-induced changes in this ratio were augmented (0.46 ± 0.10- and 0.73 ± 0.24-fold respectively compared with control; Fig. 2,A). Similarly, glucose-induced changes in cytosolic-free calcium ion concentration ([Ca2+]i; Fig. 2,B and C) were augmented in mouse islets (Fig. 2,B and C). Glucose-induced changes in [Ca2+]i in INS-1(832/13) cells were not affected by TCF7L2 depletion (Fig. 2,D), although the number of cells responding to elevated glucose was higher (46 ± 10.3% versus 71 ± 2.9%, P < 0.05). In mouse islets, the stimulation of insulin secretion by GLP-1 at permissive (8 mmol/l) glucose concentrations was abolished when TCF7L2 was silenced (Fig. 1 A).
Impact of TCF7L2 overexpression on insulin secretion.
Given the reportedly higher levels of TCF7L2 mRNA in islets from carriers of the at-risk (T) allele (18), we examined the effect of overexpressing EGFP-tagged human TCF7L2 (TCF7L2-EGFP) in mouse islets or INS-1(832/13) cells. As expected, TCF7L2-EGFP was largely confined to the nucleoplasm (Fig. 3,B). Increases in TCF7L2 protein level (approximately fourfold; Fig. 3,A) in mouse islets did not affect glucose-stimulated (15 versus 3 mmol/l) insulin secretion (Fig. 3,A). Likewise, overexpression of TCF7L2-EGFP did not affect glucose-induced [Ca2+]i increases in INS-1(832/13) cells (Fig. 3,A and C). By contrast, the proportion of INS-1(832/13) cells responding to high glucose after transfection with TCF7L2-EGFP was lower (31.8 ± 3.7% versus 47.5 ± 4.0%, P < 0.05) than in cells treated with control (EGFP-expressing) plasmid (Fig. 3,D). The increase in [Ca2+]i in response to GLP-1 of cells overexpressing TCF7L2-EGFP was not different from that of EGFP-transfected cells (Fig. 3 E).
Impact of TCF7L2 expression levels on islet and β-cell gene expression.
To explore the mechanisms through which over- or underexpression of TCF7L2 may exert effects on insulin secretion, we examined the expression of genes that are involved in various aspects of β-cell function. Systematic real-time PCR analysis of scrambled or TCF7L2 siRNA-treated mouse islets was used to quantitate the expression of 32 genes implicated in the control of β-cell function or survival (supplemental Table 1, available in an online appendix at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/cgi/content/full/db08-1187/DC1, and Fig. 4). Of these, 25 displayed consistent changes in islets depleted of, or overexpressing, TCF7L2 (Fig. 4; n = 6 separate mouse islet preparations). Depletion of TCF7L2 caused a small (∼20%) but significant decrease in preproinsulin mRNA levels, whereas overexpression of this factor approximately doubled preproinsulin mRNA levels. Conversely, preproglucagon mRNA was increased on TCF7L2 deletion, although overexpression of TCF7L2-EGFP exerted no clear effect on preproglucagon mRNA level. Neither TCF7L2 silencing nor overexpression exerted detectable effects on the mRNA level of the glucose transporter or on glucokinase, two key proteins involved in the control of glucose metabolism.
Islets treated with TCF7L2 siRNA also displayed decreased expression of preproinsulin but increased levels of mRNA encoding the TCF regulator β-catenin and the transcription factor FoxO-1, previously shown to influence the expression of pancreatic homeobox-1 (33). Similarly, mRNAs encoding the SNARE protein syntaxin 1A and the cell cyclin-dependent kinase cdk5 were increased by TCF7L2 silencing. In none of these cases did TCF7L2 overexpression cause a reciprocal decrease in mRNA levels. Expression of the sec family member Munc18–1 (34), the granule zinc transporter ZnT8/Slc30a8 (35) (also recently associated with increased risk of type 2 diabetes [9]), the peptidylprolyl cis/trans isomerise pin1 (36), and the proliferation marker ki67 (23) were all decreased when TCF7L2 was silenced. In the cases of Munc18-1 and ZnT8, TCF7L2 overexpression led to reciprocal increases in the coding mRNAs (Fig. 4), implicating the latter genes as direct transcriptional targets of TCF7L2. Changes in Munc18-1 and syntaxin 1A were also verified at the protein level by Western (immuno-) blotting (Fig. 5 A and B). There was no change in the expression of the granule trafficking proteins myosin5a and Kif5b or the signaling molecule PI3kinase-c2-α.
It was recently reported that patients carrying the SNP rs7903146 respond poorly to sulfonylurea treatment (37). We therefore determined the effect of TCF7L2 silencing on the expression of the ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channel. Depleting TCF7L2 had no effect on the expression of either the Kir 6.2 or SUR1 components in mouse islets (Fig. 4).
Effect of TCF7L2 on the subcellular distribution of secretory granules.
To explore the potential mechanisms through which changes in the expression of genes involved in granule dynamics and/or membrane fusion may affect secretion, we used TIRF microscopy of neuropeptide-labeled dense core granules (38). This approach allowed the number of granules immediately beneath (100–200 nm) the plasma membrane to be determined in scrambled shRNA or anti-TCF7L2 shRNA-transfected MIN6 cells. No differences in granule number beneath the cell surface were observed (0.38 ± 0.03 and 0.48 ± 0.04 granules/μm−2, P > 0.05, for 43 and 55 cells, respectively). There was an increase (41.8%, P < 0.01) in the proportion of granules moving after 6 to 8 min of glucose stimulation, however, implying a defect in granule recruitment or tethering (Fig. 5,D–F). To further explore this possibility, we used electron microscopy analysis of siRNA-transfected islets to quantify tethered granules. There was no significant difference in granule number per micron membrane between control and TCF7L2 siRNA-treated islets in either the morphologically docked pool (0.26 ± 0.02 versus 0.19 ± 0.02, n = 15–17 cells; Fig. 6) or the pool within 200 nm of the plasma membrane (0.87 ± 0.06 versus 0.78 ± 0.05, n = 15–17 cells).
Effect of TCF7L2 on granule fusion and Ca2+ currents.
These results implicated defects in the machinery of vesicle fusion in cells depleted of TCF7L2. We hypothesized that the differences may be observed in response to “mild” stimulation with glucose, resulting in oscillatory [Ca2+]i increases, but may be lost when [Ca2+]i is raised for a lengthy period during K+ depolarization (see Fig. 1,A). To test this hypothesis, the effect of TCF7L2 silencing on granule fusion was measured using a whole-cell patch-clamp. Stimulation protocols were used to provide oscillatory increases in [Ca2+]i as observed during stimulation with glucose. Exocytosis was triggered by trains of membrane depolarizations of different duration: 20 × 0.25 s, 10 × 0.50 s, or 10 × 2.5 s. The depolarizations elicited similar exocytotic responses from the TCF7L2-depleted and control cells with fusion dynamics strongly depending on the stimulation duration (Fig. 7) and Ca2+ current being essentially identical in the two groups. The initial cell capacitance of the TCF7L2-depleted cells was slightly higher than that of control (11.4 ± 0.7 pF versus 8.94 ± 0.5 pF, P < 0.05) and the exocytotic response to the membrane depolarization was significantly reduced in the TCF7L2-depleted cells as compared with the control (Fig. 7 A) for all pulse durations with the extent of the inhibition decreasing from ∼80% (0.2 s) to ∼40% (2.5 s).
DISCUSSION
The principal aims of this study were to determine the impact of altering the level of expression of TCF7L2 on glucose sensing and insulin secretion in pancreatic β-cells and to explore the underlying molecular mechanisms. In addition to describing changes in the expression of genes involved in β-cell survival and proliferation (pin1, Ki67, and so on) consistent with earlier findings (23,37), we demonstrate that several genes involved in β-cell function, that is, hormone production and secretion, are also under the control of TCF7L2.
TCF7L2 regulation of genes involved in insulin maturation.
It has previously been suggested that TCF7L2 may regulate the promoters for prohormone convertase-1 and -2 (17) and hence exert an effect on proinsulin processing. The expression of neither gene was altered by manipulating TCF7L2 levels in mouse islets (Fig. 4). Mouse islets overexpressing TCF7L2 displayed higher slc30a8 (another gene associated with type 2 diabetes, which plays a role in insulin processing) (9,39) gene expression (Fig. 4), whereas mouse islets in which TCF7L2 had been silenced displayed decreased slc30a8 mRNA levels. However, although preproinsulin gene expression was reduced (Fig. 4), no differences in granule number (Fig. 6), insulin content, or insulin processing (supplemental Fig. 1, available in the online appendix) were observed after treatment with TCF7L2 siRNA, suggesting that the acute effects of TCF7L2 depletion on insulin secretion are not the result of changes in insulin production.
TCF7L2 regulation of β-cell survival.
TCF7L2 knockdown reduced expression of pin1 and ki67, a marker of β-cell proliferation (23). However, electron microscopy analysis of β-cells revealed no apparent change in cellular ultrastructure indicative of endoplasmic reticulum stress, mitochondrial damage, or nuclear condensation. The observed inhibition of glucose-mediated insulin secretion seems unlikely to be the result of decreased cell viability.
Control by TCF7L2 of insulin synthesis and release.
The present study shows that reducing TCF7L2 expression in the short term (48 h) affects the normal function of the β-cell, leading to a decrease in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (Fig. 1,A–C). These changes were not associated with major perturbations in the expression of genes encoding the glucose transporter GLUT2 or glucokinase (Fig. 4). Correspondingly, glucose-stimulated increases in cytosolic-free [Ca2+] and cellular adenine nucleotide concentration (Fig. 2) were slightly enhanced on TCF7L2 depletion and no changes in the content of β-cell calcium channel subunits, sodium/calcium exchangers, PMCA, or the calcium sensing synaptotagmins were observed (supplemental Table 1, available in theonline appendix). Voltage-gated Ca2+ currents were unaltered (Fig. 7 B), showing that the channel capacity was unaffected.
These observations led us to postulate that the secretory deficiency may be the result of defects at a late step in the exocytotic process. Consistent with this view, real-time PCR and immunoblot analysis of mouse islets treated with TCF7L2 siRNA revealed increases in syntaxin 1A but decreases in Munc18-1, mRNA, and protein levels (Figs. 4 and 5 A–B). Fourfold overexpression of TCF7L2 increased Munc18-1 and rab3a mRNA levels but did not alter syntaxin 1A expression or insulin secretion in islets, suggesting syntaxin as the important effector of TCF7L2 effects. It has been suggested that TCF7L2 can act as a transcriptional repressor (40). Our overexpression data do not suggest such a function for this clone.
Increased levels of syntaxin 1A can perturb insulin secretion. Transgenic mice overexpressing syntaxin 1A exhibit insulin secretory defects and reduced Ca2+ currents (41). We did not observe evidence for any corresponding changes in free [Ca2+]i in mouse islets treated with siRNA for TCF7L2 (Fig. 2 A), suggesting that the influence of augmented syntaxin 1A expression on insulin release events is likely to be exerted through an alteration on the fusion potential of the granules in response to a glucose challenge.
Munc18-1 is an important modulator of the folded conformation of syntaxin 1A, and decreased Munc18-1 expression has been seen in islets from patients with type 2 diabetes (42) and GK rats (43). In PC12 cells, increased syntaxin 1A and decreased Munc18-1 levels had a negative effect on membrane trafficking and catecholamine secretion (44). TCF7L2 consensus binding sites (WWCAAWG) were identified in the 5′ untranslated region of both the human and mouse syntaxin 1A and Munc18–1 (using TFExplorer [http://tfexplorer.org]), suggesting that they may be direct targets for regulation by TCF7L2 (supplemental Fig. 2, available in the online appendix). The increase in syntaxin 1A and decrease in Munc18–1 levels described here may account, at least in part, for the defective glucose-stimulated insulin secretion observed in TCF7L2-depleted cells.
Despite a strong reduction in insulin secretion, we did not observe any clear alteration in the number of near-plasma membrane granules in TCF7L2 siRNA-treated islets by TIRF (Fig. 5,C) or electron microscopy (Fig. 6,A). There were no observable alterations in the expression of trafficking proteins Myosin5a or Kif5b (Fig. 4) or in the actin network structure (supplemental Fig. 4, available in the online appendix), suggesting that granule targeting to the cell surface is unaffected. Under conditions in which a repeated mild stimulation was applied (Fig. 7,B) to mimic the effects of glucose on [Ca2+]i, β-cells silenced for TCF7L2 showed impaired capacitance increases. The inhibitory effects of TCF7L2 deletion were substantially more marked at shorter pulse durations (0.2 s), most closely mimicking the spontaneous action potentials normally triggering insulin exocytosis in response to glucose than at longer pulse durations (0.5 or 2.5 s), approaching the effects of sustained depolarization with KCl (Fig. 7,A). Coupled with the increase in granule movements seen in the later stages of glucose stimulation by TIRF microscopy (Fig. 5 E and F), this observation suggests that the selective inhibition of glucose- but not KCl-stimulated insulin secretion may reflect the combined effect of failure to recruit competent granules and defective vesicle fusion during repetitive [Ca2+]i increases.
The present studies demonstrate that near complete ablation of TCF7L2 is likely to have marked effects on insulin release from pancreatic β-cells. It should be emphasized, however, that the extent of these changes is likely to considerably exceed those observed in carriers of the at-risk T-allele of TCF7L2. Future studies will be required to assess how more subtle variations in TCF7L2 level impact on β-cell function and survival.
In conclusion, lack of functional TCF7L2 leads to defective glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. This is probably attributable, in part, to changes in the expression of key regulatory genes and processes involved in granule recruitment and exocytosis.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
See accompanying original article, p. 800.
Acknowledgments
This study was funded by grants to G.A.R. from the Wellcome Trust (program grants 067081/Z/02/Z and 081958/Z/07/Z), MRC (G0401641), National Institutes of Health (ROI DKO71962-01), and European Union FP6 (Savebeta) and to G.S.X. from the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF 3-2005-112) and European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes (EFSD Albert Renold Travel Fellowship).
No potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article were reported.
We thank Prof. Andrew Halestrap and Nigel Edgell (University of Bristol) for their advice on total ADP measurements; Nasret Harun, Saharnaz Vakhshouri, and Gao Sun for excellent technical assistance; and Dr. C. Newgard (Duke University) for providing INS-1(832/13) cells. We thank Dr. Lorna Harris and Jonathan Locke for useful discussions.