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Article

miR-29a and miR-29b Contribute to Pancreatic β-Cell-Specific Silencing of Monocarboxylate Transporter 1 (Mct1)

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Pages 3182-3194 | Received 17 Dec 2010, Accepted 24 May 2011, Published online: 20 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

In pancreatic β cells, elevated glucose concentrations stimulate mitochondrial oxidative metabolism to raise intracellular ATP/ADP levels, prompting insulin secretion. Unusually low levels of expression of genes encoding the plasma membrane monocarboxylate transporter, MCT1 (SLC16A1), as well as lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA) ensure that glucose-derived pyruvate is efficiently metabolized by mitochondria, while exogenous lactate or pyruvate is unable to stimulate metabolism and hence insulin secretion inappropriately. We show here that whereas DNA methylation at the Mct1 promoter is unlikely to be involved in cell-type-specific transcriptional repression, three microRNAs (miRNAs), miR-29a, miR-29b, and miR-124, selectively target both human and mouse MCT1 3′ untranslated regions. Mutation of the cognate miR-29 or miR-124 binding sites abolishes the effects of the corresponding miRNAs, demonstrating a direct action of these miRNAs on the MCT1 message. However, despite reports of its expression in the mouse β-cell line MIN6, miR-124 was not detectably expressed in mature mouse islets. In contrast, the three isoforms of miR-29 are highly expressed and enriched in mouse islets. We show that inhibition of miR-29a in primary mouse islets increases Mct1 mRNA levels, demonstrating that miR-29 isoforms contribute to the β-cell-specific silencing of the MCT1 transporter and may thus affect insulin release.

Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/MCB.01433-10.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This study was supported by grants to G.A.R. from the Wellcome Trust (Programme 081958/Z/07/Z), MRC (G0401641), National Institutes of Health (ROI DKO71962-01), and EU FP6 grant Save beta (G.A.R. and G.K.).

We thank Maz Wilson (University of Bristol) for the kind gift of the anti-MCT1 antibody and Andrew P. Halestrap (University of Bristol) for helpful discussions.

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