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Dive into the research topics where Aliya F. Spigelman is active.

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Featured researches published by Aliya F. Spigelman.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

Isocitrate-to-SENP1 signaling amplifies insulin secretion and rescues dysfunctional β cells

Mourad Ferdaoussi; Xiao-Qing Dai; Mette V. Jensen; Runsheng Wang; Brett S. Peterson; Chao Huang; Olga Ilkayeva; Nancy Smith; Nathanael Miller; Catherine Hajmrle; Aliya F. Spigelman; Robert C. Wright; Gregory Plummer; Kunimasa Suzuki; James P. Mackay; Martijn van de Bunt; Anna L. Gloyn; Terence E. Ryan; Lisa D. Norquay; M. Julia Brosnan; Jeff Trimmer; Timothy P. Rolph; Richard G. Kibbey; Jocelyn E. Manning Fox; William F. Colmers; Orian S. Shirihai; P. Darrell Neufer; Edward T.H. Yeh; Christopher B. Newgard; Patrick E. MacDonald

Insulin secretion from β cells of the pancreatic islets of Langerhans controls metabolic homeostasis and is impaired in individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Increases in blood glucose trigger insulin release by closing ATP-sensitive K+ channels, depolarizing β cells, and opening voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels to elicit insulin exocytosis. However, one or more additional pathway(s) amplify the secretory response, likely at the distal exocytotic site. The mitochondrial export of isocitrate and engagement with cytosolic isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDc) may be one key pathway, but the mechanism linking this to insulin secretion and its role in T2D have not been defined. Here, we show that the ICDc-dependent generation of NADPH and subsequent glutathione (GSH) reduction contribute to the amplification of insulin exocytosis via sentrin/SUMO-specific protease-1 (SENP1). In human T2D and an in vitro model of human islet dysfunction, the glucose-dependent amplification of exocytosis was impaired and could be rescued by introduction of signaling intermediates from this pathway. Moreover, islet-specific Senp1 deletion in mice caused impaired glucose tolerance by reducing the amplification of insulin exocytosis. Together, our results identify a pathway that links glucose metabolism to the amplification of insulin secretion and demonstrate that restoration of this axis rescues β cell function in T2D.


Diabetes | 2012

In Vivo Role of Focal Adhesion Kinase in Regulating Pancreatic β-Cell Mass and Function Through Insulin Signaling, Actin Dynamics, and Granule Trafficking

Erica P. Cai; Marina Casimir; Stephanie A. Schroer; Cynthia T. Luk; Sally Yu Shi; Diana Choi; Xiao Qing Dai; Catherine Hajmrle; Aliya F. Spigelman; Dan Zhu; Herbert Y. Gaisano; Patrick E. MacDonald; Minna Woo

Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) acts as an adaptor at the focal contacts serving as a junction between the extracellular matrix and actin cytoskeleton. Actin dynamics is known as a determinant step in insulin secretion. Additionally, FAK has been shown to regulate insulin signaling. To investigate the essential physiological role of FAK in pancreatic β-cells in vivo, we generated a transgenic mouse model using rat insulin promoter (RIP)–driven Cre-loxP recombination system to specifically delete FAK in pancreatic β-cells. These RIPcre+fakfl/fl mice exhibited glucose intolerance without changes in insulin sensitivity. Reduced β-cell viability and proliferation resulting in decreased β-cell mass was observed in these mice, which was associated with attenuated insulin/Akt (also known as protein kinase B) and extracellular signal–related kinase 1/2 signaling and increased caspase 3 activation. FAK-deficient β-cells exhibited impaired insulin secretion with normal glucose sensing and preserved Ca2+ influx in response to glucose, but a reduced number of docked insulin granules and insulin exocytosis were found, which was associated with a decrease in focal proteins, paxillin and talin, and an impairment in actin depolymerization. This study is the first to show in vivo that FAK is critical for pancreatic β-cell viability and function through regulation in insulin signaling, actin dynamics, and granule trafficking.


Diabetologia | 2012

The voltage-dependent potassium channel subunit Kv2.1 regulates insulin secretion from rodent and human islets independently of its electrical function.

Xiao-Qing Dai; J. E. Manning Fox; Dodo Chikvashvili; Marina Casimir; Gregory Plummer; Catherine Hajmrle; Aliya F. Spigelman; Tatsuya Kin; Dafna Singer-Lahat; Youhou Kang; A. M. J. Shapiro; Herbert Y. Gaisano; Ilana Lotan; Patrick E. MacDonald

Aims/hypothesisIt is thought that the voltage-dependent potassium channel subunit Kv2.1 (Kv2.1) regulates insulin secretion by controlling beta cell electrical excitability. However, this role of Kv2.1 in human insulin secretion has been questioned. Interestingly, Kv2.1 can also regulate exocytosis through direct interaction of its C-terminus with the soluble NSF attachment receptor (SNARE) protein, syntaxin 1A. We hypothesised that this interaction mediates insulin secretion independently of Kv2.1 electrical function.MethodsWild-type Kv2.1 or mutants lacking electrical function and syntaxin 1A binding were studied in rodent and human beta cells, and in INS-1 cells. Small intracellular fragments of the channel were used to disrupt native Kv2.1–syntaxin 1A complexes. Single-cell exocytosis and ion channel currents were monitored by patch-clamp electrophysiology. Interaction between Kv2.1, syntaxin 1A and other SNARE proteins was probed by immunoprecipitation. Whole-islet Ca2+-responses were monitored by ratiometric Fura red fluorescence and insulin secretion was measured.ResultsUpregulation of Kv2.1 directly augmented beta cell exocytosis. This happened independently of channel electrical function, but was dependent on the Kv2.1 C-terminal syntaxin 1A-binding domain. Intracellular fragments of the Kv2.1 C-terminus disrupted native Kv2.1–syntaxin 1A interaction and impaired glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. This was not due to altered ion channel activity or impaired Ca2+-responses to glucose, but to reduced SNARE complex formation and Ca2+-dependent exocytosis.Conclusions/interpretationDirect interaction between syntaxin 1A and the Kv2.1 C-terminus is required for efficient insulin exocytosis and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. This demonstrates that native Kv2.1–syntaxin 1A interaction plays a key role in human insulin secretion, which is separate from the channel’s electrical function.


Endocrinology | 2016

Research-Focused Isolation of Human Islets From Donors With and Without Diabetes at the Alberta Diabetes Institute IsletCore

James Lyon; Jocelyn E. Manning Fox; Aliya F. Spigelman; Ryekjang Kim; Nancy Smith; Doug O'Gorman; Tatsuya Kin; A. M. James Shapiro; R. V. Rajotte; Patrick E. MacDonald

Recent years have seen an increased focus on human islet biology, and exciting findings in the stem cell and genomic arenas highlight the need to define the key features of mature human islets and β-cells. Donor and organ procurement parameters impact human islet yield, although for research purposes islet yield may be secondary in importance to islet function. We examined the feasibility of a research-only human islet isolation, distribution, and biobanking program and whether key criteria such as cold ischemia time (CIT) and metabolic status may be relaxed and still allow successful research-focused isolations, including from donors with type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes. Through 142 isolations over approximately 5 years, we confirm that CIT and glycated hemoglobin each have a weak negative impacts on isolation purity and yield, and extending CIT beyond the typical clinical isolation cutoff of 12 hours (to ≥ 18 h) had only a modest impact on islet function. Age and glycated hemoglobin/type 2 diabetes status negatively impacted secretory function; however, these and other biological (sex, body mass index) and procurement/isolation variables (CIT, time in culture) appear to make only a small contribution to the heterogeneity of human islet function. This work demonstrates the feasibility of extending acceptable CIT for research-focused human islet isolation and highlights the biological variation in function of human islets from donors with and without diabetes.


JCI insight | 2016

Interleukin-1 signaling contributes to acute islet compensation

Catherine Hajmrle; Nancy Smith; Aliya F. Spigelman; Xiao-Qing Dai; Laura Senior; Austin Bautista; Mourad Ferdaoussi; Patrick E. MacDonald

IL-1β is a well-established inducer of both insulin resistance and impaired pancreatic islet function. Despite this, findings examining IL-1 receptor deficiency or antagonism in in vivo animal models, as well as in clinical studies of type 2 diabetic (T2D) patients, have led to conflicting results, suggesting that the actions of IL-1β on glycemic control may be pleiotropic in nature. In the present work, we find that the ability of IL-1β to amplify glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from human islets correlates with donor BMI. Islets from obese donors are sensitized to the insulinotropic effects of this cytokine, whereas the stimulatory effects of IL-1β are lost in islets from obese T2D patients, suggesting a role for IL-1 signaling in islet compensation. Indeed, mice deficient in IL-1 receptor type I become glucose intolerant more rapidly than their WT littermates and have impaired secretory responses during the acute stages of inflammatory and metabolic stress induced by LPS and high-fat diet, respectively. IL-1β directly enhances β cell insulin secretion by increasing granule docking and soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment receptor (SNARE) complex formation at the plasma membrane. Together, our study highlights the importance of IL-1β signaling in islet compensation to metabolic and inflammatory stress.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2014

SUMOylation protects against IL-1β-induced apoptosis in INS-1 832/13 cells and human islets

Catherine Hajmrle; Mourad Ferdaoussi; Gregory Plummer; Aliya F. Spigelman; Krista Lai; Jocelyn E. Manning Fox; Patrick E. MacDonald

Posttranslational modification by the small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) peptides, known as SUMOylation, is reversed by the sentrin/SUMO-specific proteases (SENPs). While increased SUMOylation reduces β-cell exocytosis, insulin secretion, and responsiveness to GLP-1, the impact of SUMOylation on islet cell survival is unknown. Mouse islets, INS-1 832/13 cells, or human islets were transduced with adenoviruses to increase either SENP1 or SUMO1 or were transfected with siRNA duplexes to knockdown SENP1. We examined insulin secretion, intracellular Ca²⁺ responses, induction of endoplasmic reticulum stress markers and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression, and apoptosis by TUNEL and caspase 3 cleavage. Surprisingly, upregulation of SENP1 reduces insulin secretion and impairs intracellular Ca²⁺ handling. This secretory dysfunction is due to SENP1-induced cell death. Indeed, the detrimental effect of SENP1 on secretory function is diminished when two mediators of β-cell death, iNOS and NF-κB, are pharmacologically inhibited. Conversely, enhanced SUMOylation protects against IL-1β-induced cell death. This is associated with reduced iNOS expression, cleavage of caspase 3, and nuclear translocation of NF-κB. Taken together, these findings identify SUMO1 as a novel antiapoptotic protein in islets and demonstrate that reduced viability accounts for impaired islet function following SENP1 up-regulation.


Endocrinology | 2013

Functional Plasticity of the Human Infant β-Cell Exocytotic Phenotype

Jocelyn E. Manning Fox; Karen Seeberger; Xiao Qing Dai; James Lyon; Aliya F. Spigelman; Jelena Kolic; Catherine Hajmrle; Jamie W. Joseph; Tatsuya Kin; A. M. James Shapiro; Gregory S. Korbutt; Patrick E. MacDonald

Our understanding of adult human β-cells is advancing, but we know little about the function and plasticity of β-cells from infants. We therefore characterized islets and single islet cells from human infants after isolation and culture. Although islet morphology in pancreas biopsies was similar to that in adults, infant islets after isolation and 24-48 hours of culture had less insulin staining, content, and secretion. The cultured infant islets expressed pancreatic and duodenal homeobox 1 and several (Glut1, Cav1.3, Kir6.2) but not all (syntaxin 1A and synaptosomal-associated protein 25) markers of functional islets, suggesting a loss of secretory phenotype in culture. The activity of key ion channels was maintained in isolated infant β-cells, whereas exocytosis was much lower than in adults. We examined whether a functional exocytotic phenotype could be reestablished under conditions thought to promote β-cell differentiation. After a 24- to 28-day expansion and maturation protocol, we found preservation of endocrine markers and hormone expression, an increased proportion of insulin-positive cells, elevated expression of syntaxin 1A and synaptosomal-associated protein 25, and restoration of exocytosis to levels comparable with that in adult β-cells. Thus, human infant islets are prone to loss of their exocytotic phenotype in culture but amenable to experimental approaches aimed at promoting expansion and functional maturation. Control of exocytotic protein expression may be an important mechanism underlying the plasticity of the secretory machinery, an increased understanding of which may lead to improved regenerative approaches to treat diabetes.


The Journal of Physiology | 2014

SUMO1 enhances cAMP‐dependent exocytosis and glucagon secretion from pancreatic α‐cells

Xiao-Qing Dai; Aliya F. Spigelman; Shara Khan; Matthias Braun; Jocelyn E. Manning Fox; Patrick E. MacDonald

SUMOylation is the reversible modification of proteins by the attachment of small ubiquitin‐like modifier (SUMO) peptides, which in pancreatic β‐cells inhibits insulin exocytosis and glucagon‐like peptide‐1 (GLP‐1) receptor signalling. We find in glucagon‐secreting pancreatic α‐cells that SUMOylation increases excitability and enhances exocytosis by increasing L‐type Ca2+ currents. The ability of SUMOylation to facilitate α‐cell exocytosis is cAMP‐dependent, leading to enhanced adrenaline‐stimulated glucagon secretion. SUMO1 prevents inhibition of α‐cell Na+ current and exocytosis by a GLP‐1 receptor agonist, but does not prevent GLP‐1 receptor‐dependent inhibition of glucagon secretion. SUMOylation modifies α‐cell responses to cAMP‐dependent signalling and, by contrast with its inhibitory effects in β‐cells, enhances α‐cell exocytosis and glucagon secretion.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Insulin secretion induced by glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide requires phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase γ in rodent and human β-cells.

Jelena Kolic; Aliya F. Spigelman; Alannah M. Smith; Jocelyn E. Manning Fox; Patrick E. MacDonald

Background: PI3Kγ is implicated in insulin secretion and actin remodeling and is activated by glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP). Results: GIP activates Ras-related-C3 botulinum toxin substrate-1 (Rac1), induces actin remodeling, and amplifies β-cell insulin secretion in a PI3Kγ-dependent manner. Conclusion: Insulin secretion induced by GIP requires PI3Kγ. Significance: Understanding the β-cell signaling pathway will help us understand β-cell dysfunction in diabetes. PI3Kγ, a G-protein-coupled type 1B phosphoinositol 3-kinase, exhibits a basal glucose-independent activity in β-cells and can be activated by the glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP). We therefore investigated the role of the PI3Kγ catalytic subunit (p110γ) in insulin secretion and β-cell exocytosis stimulated by GIP. We inhibited p110γ with AS604850 (1 μmol/liter) or knocked it down using an shRNA adenovirus or siRNA duplex in mouse and human islets and β-cells. Inhibition of PI3Kγ blunted the exocytotic and insulinotropic response to GIP receptor activation, whereas responses to the glucagon-like peptide-1 or the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist exendin-4 were unchanged. Downstream, we find that GIP, much like glucose stimulation, activates the small GTPase protein Rac1 to induce actin remodeling. Inhibition of PI3Kγ blocked these effects of GIP. Although exendin-4 could also stimulate actin remodeling, this was not prevented by p110γ inhibition. Finally, forced actin depolymerization with latrunculin B restored the exocytotic and secretory responses to GIP during PI3Kγ inhibition, demonstrating that the loss of GIP-induced actin depolymerization was indeed limiting insulin exocytosis.


Diabetologia | 2013

Distinct and opposing roles for the phosphatidylinositol 3-OH kinase catalytic subunits p110α and p110β in the regulation of insulin secretion from rodent and human beta cells.

Jelena Kolic; Aliya F. Spigelman; Gregory Plummer; E. Leung; Catherine Hajmrle; Tatsuya Kin; A. M. J. Shapiro; J. E. Manning Fox; Patrick E. MacDonald

Aims/hypothesisPhosphatidylinositol 3-OH kinases (PI3Ks) regulate beta cell mass, gene transcription, and function, although the contribution of the specific isoforms is unknown. As reduced type 1A PI3K signalling is thought to contribute to impaired insulin secretion, we investigated the role of the type 1A PI3K catalytic subunits α and β (p110α and -β) in insulin granule recruitment and exocytosis in rodent and human islets.MethodsThe p110α and p110β subunits were inhibited pharmacologically or by small hairpin (sh)RNA-mediated knockdown, and were directly infused or overexpressed in mouse and human islets, beta cells and INS-1 832/13 cells. Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS), single-cell exocytosis, Ca2+ signalling, plasma membrane granule localisation, and actin density were monitored.ResultsInhibition or knockdown of p110α increased GSIS. This was not due to altered Ca2+ responses, depolymerisation of cortical actin or increased cortical granule density, but to enhanced Ca2+-dependent exocytosis. Intracellular infusion of recombinant PI3Kα (p110α/p85β) blocked exocytosis. Conversely, knockdown (but not pharmacological inhibition) of p110β blunted GSIS, reduced cortical granule density and impaired exocytosis. Exocytosis was rescued by direct intracellular infusion of recombinant PI3Kβ (p110β/p85β) even when p110β catalytic activity was inhibited. Conversely, both the wild-type p110β and a catalytically inactive mutant directly facilitated exocytosis.Conclusions/interpretationType 1A PI3K isoforms have distinct and opposing roles in the acute regulation of insulin secretion. While p110α acts as a negative regulator of beta cell exocytosis and insulin secretion, p110β is a positive regulator of insulin secretion through a mechanism separate from its catalytic activity.

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