Defective insulin secretory response to intravenous glucose in C57Bl/6J compared to C57Bl/6N mice.

Journal: Molecular Metabolism
Published:
Abstract

Objective: The C57Bl/6J (Bl/6J) mouse is the most widely used strain in metabolic research. This strain carries a mutation in nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase (Nnt), a mitochondrial enzyme involved in NADPH production, which has been suggested to lead to glucose intolerance and beta-cell dysfunction. However, recent reports comparing Bl/6J to Bl/6N (carrying the wild-type Nnt allele) under normal diet have led to conflicting results using glucose tolerance tests. Thus, we assessed glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS), insulin sensitivity, clearance and central glucose-induced insulin secretion in Bl/6J and N mice using gold-standard methodologies.

Methods: GSIS was measured using complementary tests (oral and intravenous glucose tolerance tests) and hyperglycemic clamps. Whole-body insulin sensitivity was assessed using euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamps. Neurally-mediated insulin secretion was measured during central hyperglycemia.

Results: Bl/6J mice have impaired GSIS compared to Bl/6N when glucose is administered intravenously during both a tolerance test and hyperglycemic clamp, but not in response to oral glucose. First and second phases of GSIS are altered without changes in whole body insulin sensitivity, insulin clearance, beta-cell mass or central response to glucose, thereby demonstrating defective beta-cell function in Bl/6J mice.

Conclusions: The Bl/6J mouse strain displays impaired insulin secretion. These results have important implications for choosing the appropriate test to assess beta-cell function and background strain in genetically modified mouse models.

Authors
Grace Fergusson, Mélanie Ethier, Mélanie Guévremont, Chloé Chrétien, Camille Attané, Erik Joly, Xavier Fioramonti, Marc Prentki, Vincent Poitout, Thierry Alquier