FLIM-based pH measurements reveal incretin-induced rejuvenation of aged insulin secretory granules
AbstractInsulin is stored in dense-core secretory granules (SGs) and is released from beta cells in two distinct phases upon glucose stimulation. Newly synthesized insulin SGs are secreted preferentially, but the underlying mechanism of this phenomenon remains elusive. The relationship of SG age with their intraluminal pH is of particular interest: proinsulin conversion by prohormone convertases follows the acidification of immature SGs by the vacuolar proton-translocating ATPase (v-ATPase). v-ATPases may also participate in the formation of the fusion pore for SG exocytosis, with intraluminal alkalinization inhibiting membrane fusion. Previous studies examined the luminal pH of SGs on a population level only. Here we measured the pH-dependent lifetime changes of eCFP fused to the ICA512-RESP18 homology domain to assess for the first time the luminal pH of individual age-defined SGs in insulinoma INS-1 cells by fluorescence-lifetime imaging microscopy. We show that 2-4-hour-old young SGs have a pH of ~5.5, while 26-28-hour-old SGs have a pH of ~6.2. Remarkably, the GLP-1 receptor agonist Exendin-4 prompted the re-acidification of old SGs in a glutamate-dependent fashion, while it did not affect the pH of young SGs. This study demonstrates that insulin SGs change their pH over time - a change that is reversible by insulin secretagogues. Hence, it provides novel insight into the mechanisms accounting for aging and exocytosis of SGs and suggests that their ‘rejuvenation’ may be exploited to enhance insulin secretion in diabetes.