Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T00:37:12.967Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Zinc, pancreatic islet cell function and diabetes: new insights into an old story

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 January 2013

Fabrice Chimienti*
Affiliation:
Mellitech SAS, Université Joseph Fourier, UFR Chimie-Biologie, Bat B, 2280 Rue de la Piscine, F-38400St Martin D'Heres, France
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Zn is an essential trace element, involved in many different cellular processes. A relationship between Zn, pancreatic function and diabetes was suggested almost 70 years ago. To emphasise the importance of Zn in biology, the history of Zn research in the field of diabetes along with a general description of Zn transporter families will be reviewed. The paper will then focus on the effects of Zn on pancreatic β-cell function, including insulin synthesis and secretion, Zn signalling in the pancreatic islet, the redox functions of Zn and its target genes. The recent association of two ‘Zn genes’, i.e. metallothionein (MT) and Zn transporter 8 (SLC 30A8), with type 2 diabetes at the genetic level and with insulin secretion in clinical studies offers a potential new way to identify new drug targets to modulate Zn homeostasis directly in β-cells. The action of Zn for insulin action in its target organs, as Zn signalling in other pancreatic islet cells, will be addressed. Therapeutic Zn–insulin preparations and the influence of Zn and Zn transporters in type 1 diabetes will also be discussed. An extensive review of the literature on the clinical studies using Zn supplementation in the prevention and treatment of both types of diabetes, including complications of the disease, will evaluate the overall beneficial effects of Zn supplementation on blood glucose control, suggesting that Zn might be a candidate ion for diabetes prevention and therapy. Clearly, the story of the links between Zn, pancreatic islet cells and diabetes is only now unfolding, and we are presently only at the first chapter.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2013 

Insulin, diabetes and zinc research

Diabetes is one of the most prevalent chronic diseases, the hallmark of which is hyperglycaemia due to a lack of insulin secretion and/or action. Insulin, the glucose-lowering hormone secreted by pancreatic β-cells, was discovered in 1921 in Toronto by Best and Banting, after they isolated pancreatic extracts without contamination of the tissue extract with digestive enzymes(Reference Banting, Best and Collip1). These extracts, when injected in a pancreatectomised, diabetic dog, caused a huge drop in blood glucose levels. The substance isolated from pancreatic islets, first called isletin, became rapidly known as insulin. Soon after this discovery, the insulin preparation was successfully tested on a 14-year-old diabetic patient at the Toronto General Hospital. Best and colleagues continued improving the pancreatic extract and eventually managed to produce enough for the hospital's demand. Crystalline insulin was isolated in 1926, using a highly buffered solution containing several substances as the crystallising medium(Reference Abel2). The very nature of the substance(s) promoting crystallisation and the mechanisms of crystal formation remained unclear despite it being known that the pancreas contains high amounts of Zn. A few years later, Scott discovered that adding Zn to a phosphate-buffered solution containing insulin induced the formation of characteristic rhombohedral insulin crystals(Reference Scott3). He then showed a direct effect of Zn ions on the action of insulin(Reference Scott and Fisher4). Because of the close association between insulin and Zn, Scott's next idea was to estimate the Zn content in the pancreas of a series of normal and diabetic individuals(Reference Scott and Fisher5). Interestingly, he found that the amount of Zn contained in the pancreas of diabetics is only one-half that of healthy subjects, while there was no difference in the liver Zn concentration, raising the possibility that at least part of the Zn in the pancreas could be concerned with the storage of insulin. Thus was born our understanding of the link between insulin and Zn.

A second breakthrough in the diabetes field came from the discovery of the structure of insulin. Following Scott's discovery that the insulin preparations from different species had the same effect, it has been suggested that different insulins behave as a single molecule in solubility studies, despite some differences in some amino acids(Reference Sanger6). In 1955, Sanger and colleagues determined that conserved amino acids and important disulfide bridges might be implicated in insulin activity, since insulin was inactivated by any treatment affecting those sulfur bonds(Reference Brown, Sanger and Kitai7). After many years of research that brought new insights to our understanding of the structure of insulin, including the determination of single-chain amino acid composition and X-ray photographs of single insulin crystals, Adams et al. (Reference Adams, Blundell and Dodson8) eventually determined the crystal structure at a resolution of 2.8 Ångström. They showed that the crystal was formed by six insulin molecules and two Zn atoms and determined the intramolecular Zn coordination spheres.

Nevertheless, the physico-chemical interactions between Zn and insulin had been known for decades before the crystal structure of Zn–insulin (2:6) was resolved. As early as in the 1930s, it was clear that the addition of Zn to insulin delayed its action when injected into diabetic patients. Indeed, Zn ions were rapidly added to insulin in vitro to produce protamine Zn insulin (PZI) and used in clinics(Reference Rabinowitch, Foster and Fowler9). However, PZI is now rarely used in human patients, but is instead used by veterinarians, especially to treat cats with diabetes. After the addition of Zn ions to insulin preparations, the quantity of insulin necessary to control blood glucose was found to be significantly reduced, thus requiring fewer injections(Reference Rabinowitch, Fowler and Corcoran10). Therefore, laboratories rapidly aimed to develop different insulin preparations that have a faster onset to complement the longer-lasting action. NPH insulin (or neutral protamine Hagedorn), which is still on the market, has the advantage of being possibly mixed with a fast-acting insulin to complement its longer-lasting action(Reference Lacey11). Removing Zn to avoid crystallisation and accelerate the onset of insulin action is definitely a way to formulate fast-acting insulin preparations. Indeed, it has been shown recently that insulin glulisine (3B-Lys, 29B-Glu-human insulin) has the most rapid onset of action because of its Zn-free formulation(Reference Becker and Frick12). Regular plus NPH insulins are the preferred mixture of rapid- and intermediate-acting insulins because the effect of the combined insulins is the same as that of regular and NPH insulin injected separately(Reference Anderson and Campbell13).

Despite Zn being recognised as an important ion for insulin crystallisation and action, the molecular mechanisms of its mode of action remained poorly understood. Furthermore, research was limited by the lack of tools available to investigate Zn homeostasis in the β-cell by physiologists. Moreover, in the mid-1960s, the second messenger Ca was shown to potentiate insulin secretion(Reference Planchart14). Researchers soon established the now well-known Ca dependency of glucose-induced insulin release(Reference Devis, Somers and Van Obberghen15), and Ca probes were developed, which boosted research on insulin secretion by the β-cell(Reference Grynkiewicz, Poenie and Tsien16). Indeed, from the early 1970s, Ca has been revealed as one of the most important protagonists in the field of diabetes and insulin secretion; Zn became less important for diabetologists. Intracellular Ca2+ concentration and fluctuations (oscillations) are known to regulate key cellular and signal-transduction processes; in regard to β-cell signalling, Ca is the key ion for both triggering and amplifying insulin secretion (for a review, see Henquin(Reference Henquin17)).

In the mid-1990s, the development of Zn-specific fluorescent probes, concomitantly, though independently to the identification of Zn transporters, represented a leap forward in Zn research. Emphasising that studies on intracellular Ca, as other important ions, have been greatly facilitated by the use of fluorophores, Zalewski et al. (Reference Zalewski, Forbes and Betts18) synthesised a membrane-permeant fluorophore specific to Zn2+, Zinquin. In 1994, they used this intracellular Zn probe, which allows real-time observation of exchangeable Zn in live cells, to reveal labile Zn in pancreatic islet cells(Reference Zalewski, Millard and Forbes19). Importantly, they showed that the Zinquin signal responded to stimulation of islet cells with a high concentration of glucose, i.e. inducing insulin secretion decreased the islet cells' content of labile Zn. Probes similar to those of Ca were now available for use by the research community. Concomitantly, the very first mammalian Zn transporter was cloned and characterised(Reference Palmiter and Findley20). In this seminal paper, Palmiter & Findley(Reference Palmiter and Findley20) established in 1995 the main characteristics of the Zn transporters ZnT (SLC30A; solute carrier 30A), by describing a six-transmembrane domains protein, with a large intracellular loop and a C-terminal tail, which was suggested to function as a multimer and transport Zn from the cytosol to the extracellular space. The same group, 1 year later, paved the way to the identification of the ZnT protein family of Zn transporters, by identifying two other proteins, named ZnT2 and ZnT3(Reference Palmiter, Cole and Findley21, Reference Palmiter, Cole and Quaife22). In 1998, the group led by Eide reported the cloning of the first Zn transporter genes from the ZIP (Zrt-like, Irt-like protein; SLC39A, solute-carrier-39A) protein family of Zn transporters, namely the ZIP1, ZIP2 and ZIP3 genes of Arabidopsis thaliana (Reference Grotz, Fox and Connolly23). Transporting Zn in the opposite direction of ZnT, ZIP transporters carry Zn ions across cellular membranes from the extracellular space – or intracellular organelles – to the cytosol. This study led to the identification of a family of up to fourteen related proteins (for a review, see Eide(Reference Eide24)). With the cloning of an increasing number of Zn transporters and development of fluorescent probes(Reference Burdette, Walkup and Spingler25), a new era opened for Zn research. Indeed, the last 20 years has witnessed overall very rapid progress in our understanding of intracellular Zn homeostasis, therefore contrasting with the slow tempo observed during the 1950s–1980s.

It is now well established that cells control uptake and excretion of Zn2+ through two different families of proteins: the SLC39A and SLC30A genes, which encode for ZIP and ZnT, respectively(Reference Lichten and Cousins26). To date, up to twenty-four Zn transporters have been described, most of which have relevance to clinical science. Some transporters have ubiquitous expression, while others are restricted to a few tissues, which led to the question of why there are so many Zn transporters, compared with those needed for other ions such as Cu or Fe(Reference Cousins, Lichten and Rink27). Such a large panel of ZnT and ZIP transporters both serves a housekeeping role in cellular Zn homeostasis and participates in cell signalling. Indeed, Zn transporters play important physiological roles, for example, during embryogenesis, cell division and migration, and have a specific role in different organ systems, including but not restricted to the brain, immune system, skin and pancreas (for a review, see Plum et al. (Reference Plum, Rink and Haase28)). The Zn transporter ZIP4, expressed at the apical surface of intestinal enterocytes and visceral endoderm cells, responds to Zn levels and translocates from cytoplasmic vesicles to the plasma membrane to enhance Zn uptake during Zn deficiency, suggesting that Zn-regulated intracellular trafficking of Zn transporters is an important mechanism for the control of dietary Zn absorption, and cellular Zn homeostasis(Reference Kim, Wang and Dufner-Beattie29). Other members of the ZIP family have been shown to be activated post-translationally by phosphorylation, and are strongly implicated in cell signalling. In response to extracellular Zn or epidermal-growth-factor/ionomycine treatment, the endoplasmic reticulum Zn transporter ZIP7 is phosphorylated on conserved residues by protein kinase CK2, leading to the release of intracellular Zn stores and subsequent activation of protein kinase B (Akt), and extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 (ERK1/2)(Reference Taylor, Hiscox and Nicholson30). ZIP7 is therefore a key protein for Zn signalling during proliferative responses and cell migration. A member of the ZnT family, ZnT1, levels of which rapidly increase after global ischaemic injury, is associated with long-life (L)-type Ca channels, thus leading to downstream activation of ERK and heart protection after ischaemia–reperfusion injury(Reference Beharier, Dror and Levy31). Indeed, at the level of the organism, Zn transporters play a crucial role in maintaining adequate Zn homeostasis in all organs. Some mutations that affect particular transporters can lead to genetic disorders, or susceptibility to diseases. Mutations in ZIP4 are responsible for acrodermatitis enteropathica (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man OMIM 201100; http://www.omim.org/entry/201100), a rare autosomal recessive disease in which patients suffer from a severe general Zn deficiency resulting from defective uptake of Zn in the intestine(Reference Kury, Dreno and Bezieau32). In this case, a lifelong treatment in the form of Zn supplementation, typically 1–3 mg Zn/kg administered orally per d, is sufficient to eliminate the symptoms(Reference Kiechl-Kohlendorfer, Fink and Steichen-Gersdorf33). Proteins controlling the cellular availability of Zn are also involved in diabetes, for which susceptibility loci have been identified in the genes encoding for ZnT8 and metallothionein (MT) 1A(Reference Yang, Li and Yu34, Reference Sladek, Rocheleau and Rung35) (see below). However, an exhaustive and comprehensive description of Zn homeostasis-regulating proteins is out of the scope of the present review. Hence, the paper will focus preferentially on the Zn transporters that have been shown to be crucial for islet cell function; for specific reviews on Zn transporters, see Cousins & Lichten(Reference Cousins, Lichten and Rink27) and Kambe(Reference Kambe36).

Zinc and the pancreatic β-cell

Insulin is synthesised and stored in the pancreatic β-cell in a solid form, as a Zn–insulin (2:6) crystal(Reference Dodson and Steiner37). Hence, the pancreatic β-cell is one of the cell types that contain the highest quantities of Zn. It is estimated that the Zn content within insulin granules is in the millimolar range, for example, 10–20 mm(Reference Foster, Leapman and Li38). As an enzymic cofactor, Zn2+ is also implicated in all processes of synthesis, storage and secretion of insulin, as well as being a signalling molecule after insulin secretion(Reference Ishihara, Maechler and Gjinovci39).

After synthesis in the reticulum, pro-insulin is transported to the Golgi where immature, secretory ‘progranules’ are formed. Both pro-insulin and insulin associate with Zn, and it has been shown that the formation of pro-insulin–Zn hexamers is fundamental for its processing to insoluble insulin–Zn crystals(Reference Dunn40). Therefore, a sufficient amount of Zn in the β-cell, particularly in insulin granules, is required for the correct hexamerisation and processing of insulin. Pancreatic β-cells express most of the Zn transporter proteins(Reference Wijesekara, Chimienti and Wheeler41), which ensure basal Zn homeostasis required for providing Zn to all Zn proteins, for example, Zn enzymes and transcription factors. Among them, ZnT5 is a Zn transporter more abundant in pancreatic β-cells than in other tissues. It is expressed in endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus, and thus may have an important function in the β-cell(Reference Kambe36, Reference Kambe, Narita and Yamaguchi-Iwai42). Another important Zn transporter in the β-cell might be ZnT3, which is highly expressed in the brain but is also present in different organs such as the testis, retina, prostate and pancreas (for a review, see Smidt & Rungby(Reference Smidt and Rungby43)). ZnT3 was shown to be up-regulated by glucose in a concentration-dependent manner, and glucose metabolism is affected in vivo in ZnT3 knock-out mice(Reference Smidt, Jessen and Petersen44). The same group showed more recently that silencing of ZnT3 in INS-1E cells significantly increased cell death, while both insulin content and secretion were decreased(Reference Petersen, Smidt and Magnusson45).

Contrasting with the ubiquitous expression of some other ZnT, the Zn transporter ZnT8 has a unique expression profile, being almost exclusively restricted to pancreatic islets(Reference Chimienti, Devergnas and Favier46). However, it has been reported to be expressed, though at very much lower levels, in other endocrine cells such as adipocytes(Reference Smidt, Pedersen and Brock47), epithelial cells within thyroid follicles and in the adrenal cortex(Reference Murgia, Devirgiliis and Mancini48). Its unique expression profile suggests a primary physiological role to the pancreatic islet cells, for which it is a major component for both Zn accumulation in the insulin granules (Fig. 1) and regulation of insulin secretion(Reference Chimienti, Devergnas and Pattou49). Interestingly, SLC 30A8, the gene encoding for ZnT8, has been implicated in the development of type 2 diabetes in man by recent genome-wide association studies(Reference Sladek, Rocheleau and Rung35, Reference Zeggini, Weedon and Lindgren50). This polymorphism, for which the at-risk allele corresponds to the polymorphic variant rs13266634, is associated with a 53 % increased risk of developing diabetes. The transition T-C in the coding region of SLC30A8 induces in the protein a change in amino acid, from a tryptophan to arginine at position 325, which impairs the Zn transport activity of the protein(Reference Nicolson, Bellomo and Wijesekara51). The link between impaired β-cell function and decreased Zn transport activity by ZnT8 has also been reported in vitro and in clinical studies(Reference Petersen, Smidt and Magnusson45, Reference Dupuis, Langenberg and Prokopenko52). For example, ZnT8 has been shown to affect insulin secretion in a Danish population, where homozygous carriers of the risk allele had an estimated 22 % lower insulin response than carriers of the protective allele(Reference Steinthorsdottir, Thorleifsson and Reynisdottir53). Similarly, Staiger et al. demonstrated that rs13266634 is associated with reduced insulin secretion stimulated by intravenously administered glucose(Reference Staiger, Machicao and Stefan54), suggesting that rs13266634 in SLC30A8 is a crucial allele for β-cell function. Moreover, the R325W non-synonymous polymorphism in ZnT8 has been shown to protect against post-transplantation diabetes mellitus(Reference Kang, Kim and Kim55), a major metabolic complication in renal transplant recipients, for which insulin-secretory defects play an important role in pathogenesis. The same polymorphism in SLC30A8, rs13266634, has eventually been associated with glycated Hb (HbA1c), a marker of long-term blood glucose levels, in a non-diabetic population(Reference Pare, Chasman and Parker56). Altoghether, an increasing number of studies have confirmed that the SNP rs13266634 is among the most confirmed genetic markers of type 2 diabetes in Europeans and East Asians(Reference Cauchi, Del Guerra and Choquet57).

Fig. 1 Mechanisms of zinc homeostasis in the β-cell: intracellular free cytosolic zinc, which can be either imported through Zrt-like, Irt-like protein (ZIP) transporters or released from metallothionein (MT) during oxidative stress, can be imported into insulin granules through zinc transporter ZnT8 to form crystalline insulin–zinc hexamers. Zinc can also bind to metal-responsive transcription factor-1 (MTF-1), which translocates to the nucleus and further up-regulates MT synthesis. MT-Ox, oxidised MT; ROS, reactive oxygen species.

Mice displaying global or β-cell-specific deletion of ZnT8 have been studied(Reference Nicolson, Bellomo and Wijesekara51, Reference Lemaire, Ravier and Schraenen58Reference Wijesekara, Dai and Hardy60). Despite slightly different metabolic phenotypes between laboratories, these studies reported a massive reduction in the capacity of pancreatic islets to store Zn, a lack of crystalline insulin in β-cells, impaired glucose-induced insulin secretion and glucose tolerance abnormalities. It is noteworthy that silencing ZnT8 expression in the INS-1 β-cells led to similar results, i.e. reduced insulin content and glucose-inducible insulin secretion(Reference Fu, Tian and Pratt61). Moreover, the effects of high-fat diet feeding on ZnT8-null mice showed that global loss of ZnT8 is involved in exacerbating diet-induced obesity and resulting insulin resistance(Reference Hardy, Wijesekara and Genkin62). Since ZnT8 is also expressed in other tissues and in pancreatic α-cells, the effects of ZnT8 on obesity and insulin resistance might be due to non-β-cell-specific effects. Overall, these studies support the increasing body of literature that suggests that ZnT8 is crucial for insulin processing and secretion.

To highlight the importance of correct Zn homeostasis for pancreatic islets, another Zn-binding protein, MT, has resulted in numerous research studies describing the effects of Zn on reducing diabetic complications associated with oxidative stress(Reference Islam and du Loots63). MT are intracellular low-molecular-weight, cysteine-rich proteins with potent metal-binding capacity (for a review, see Maret(Reference Maret64)). MT can buffer and distribute Zn to apoproteins, including transcription factors, since they can shuttle from the cytosol to cellular compartments such as the nucleus(Reference Levadoux, Mahon and Beattie65). MT also have redox functions, which are made possible by their thiolate coordination environments. It has been shown that overexpression of MT in transgenic mice could protect from streptozotocin-induced diabetes, mainly because of their scavenging properties against reactive oxygen species(Reference Chen, Carlson and Pellet66). More recently, Park et al. (Reference Park, Min and Kim67) showed that intraperitoneal injection of the Tat-MT protein delayed the development of diabetes in streptozotocin-treated mice and improved insulin secretion in rats by decreasing the formation of reactive oxygen species and subsequent DNA fragmentation(Reference Park, Min and Kim67). Indeed, MT provides a mechanism whereby cellular Zn buffering and availability and redox metabolism are linked(Reference Maret and Vallee68). When oxidants react with thiolate clusters of MT, Zn ions are released and the oxidised protein is formed (Fig. 1). Moreover, released Zn can up-regulate MT synthesis through nuclear translocation of the metal-responsive transcription factor-1, which acts as a sensor to up-regulate Zn-binding proteins(Reference Stitt, Wasserloos and Tang69). Polymorphisms in MT1A have been linked to the susceptibility of diabetes and cardiovascular complications. In a recent study, the +647 A/C MT1A polymorphism was linked to a modulation of MT levels, to an increase in Zn release and to type 2 diabetes(Reference Giacconi, Bonfigli and Testa70). Interestingly, previous work from the same group already linked a SNP in the promoter region of the MT2A gene (209 A/G MT2A) with hyperglycaemia and increased HbA1c(Reference Giacconi, Cipriano and Muti71). Importantly, the work of the Mocchegiani group(Reference Mocchegiani, Giacconi and Malavolta72), by studying polymorphisms affecting Zn release by MT, provided evidence for their involvement in some pathogenic mechanism of type 2 diabetes and its complications, essentially cardiovascular outcomes(Reference Mocchegiani, Giacconi and Malavolta72).

Consequently, proteins implicated in Zn storage within β-cells, such as ZnT8 or MT, are crucial to protect the β-cell mass from cell death during diabetes. MT, along with the high content of Zn in the pancreatic β-cells therefore represent a mechanism by which β-cells are protected from cell death. Indeed, Zn depletion, a condition often observed during diabetes, may induce apoptosis by itself(Reference Seve, Chimienti and Favier73) and/or promote oxidative stress-induced apoptosis(Reference Baynes74). However, Zn could act as a double-edged sword, and Zn overload can also induce apoptosis in pancreatic β-cells(Reference Chang, Cho and Koh75). In this case, Zn homeostasis proteins such as ZnT8 or MT could also protect cells by sequestering Zn either in intracellular vesicles or through thiolate clusters.

Hence, the strict preservation of ‘free’ Zn levels in the β-cells is crucial in the context of glucose regulation of Zn concentrations. Indeed, a decrease in intracellular free Zn in islet cells in response to high concentration of glucose has been observed with the Zn-specific fluorescent probe Zinquin(Reference Zalewski, Millard and Forbes19). However, a more recent study reported an increase in cytosolic free Zn concentration within primary β-cells(Reference Bellomo, Meur and Rutter76). Such a discrepancy in the changes of Zn concentration by glucose can be explained by either the nature and localisation of the probes used for these studies, the nature of the model, i.e. isolated β-cells or pancreatic islets, and/or other factors. Interestingly, the latter study hypothesised that the increase in cytosolic free Zn concentrations may be due to the uptake (or reuptake) of Zn, and/or to Zn release by MT upon oxidative stress induced by high glucose. Indeed, maintaining adequate intracellular and intragranular Zn levels facilitates insulin synthesis and processing as well as its storage, for example, crystallisation.

Zinc and type 1 diabetes

Type 1 diabetes is an organ-specific auto-immune disease in which the body's immune system specifically destroys pancreatic β-cells, so that the pancreas is no longer able to produce insulin. Immune attack of the pancreas by specific T cells also results in the production of auto-antibodies, which are both causal to the disease and used for diagnostic purposes. The most common auto-antibodies are directed against insulin, glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) and islet cell antigen-2 (IA-2, a tyrosine phosphatase-like protein), all of which are intracellular proteins relatively specific to pancreatic β-cells. They also share the property to be elements of the insulin secretion pathway(Reference Lieberman and DiLorenzo77).

As for type 2 diabetes, a hallmark of type 1 diabetes is hypozincaemia. Taking into account the importance of Zn for the correct functioning of the immune system (for a review, see Haase & Rink(Reference Haase and Rink78)), a drop in plasma Zn levels during diabetes may aggravate the disease. However, it is noteworthy that Zn supplementation studies attenuate the disease (see below). Importantly, an innovative work by Hutton and colleagues recently identified a fourth major common auto-antigen: the Zn transporter ZnT8(Reference Wenzlau, Juhl and Yu79). Inclusion of ZnT8 auto-antibodies (ZnT8Ab) in diagnostic tests was found to increase the diagnostic specificity of type 1 diabetes, raising detection rates to 98 % at disease onset(Reference Vaziri-Sani, Oak and Radtke80). Moreover, a very recent study reported that ZnT8 is also recognised by autoreactive CD8+T cells, which play a central role in diabetes pathogenesis(Reference Énée, Kratzer and Arnoux81). Interestingly, the main epitopes for auto-antibodies against ZnT8 are defined in the region of amino acid 325, i.e. the same polymorphic amino acid linked to type 2 diabetes (see above). Moreover, genotype analysis in type 1 diabetic patients showed that patients with a diabetes onset before the age of 5 years had an increased prevalence of the cytosine (C) allele (the at-risk allele for type 2 diabetes) compared with patients who developed type 1 diabetes after the age of 5 years(Reference Gohlke, Ferrari and Koczwara82), suggesting that genetic susceptibility for β-cell dysfunction in the presence of autoimmunity may lead to early manifestation and accelerated progression of the disease.

Some insulin-dependent type 1 diabetic patients are eventually grafted with human islets to avoid insulin dependency. However, the success of transplantation depends largely on the survival of the transplanted islets. Using an innovative method, Kerr-Conte et al. (Reference Kerr-Conte, Vandewalle and Moerman83) improved the quality of pre-transplant human islets and increased islets viability by adding zinc sulfate as a supplement in the culture medium. Remarkably, in an original study using diabetic rats as recipients for syngeneic islets, Okamoto et al. (Reference Okamoto, Kuroki and Adachi84) showed that a Zn-rich environment significantly improved transplanted islet survival. Indeed, they showed that in rats supplemented with Zn, not only were plasma Zn levels higher than in controls, but early graft loss was decreased and blood glucose levels were lower than in controls, suggesting that a Zn-rich environment is advantageous for the recipient during intraportal islet transplantation.

The effect of zinc in insulin target organs

The insulinomimetic effect of Zn has been known for decades. Indeed, as early as in 1980, Zn was shown to exert a potent stimulatory effect upon lipogenesis in vitro (Reference Coulston and Dandona85). Zn-stimulated lipogenesis by adipocytes was found to be independent of and additive to that of insulin. Further studies indicated that Zn ions stimulate glucose transport and glucose oxidation(Reference May and Contoreggi86). Interestingly, Zn increases both lipogenesis and glucose transport through activation of the entire insulin-signalling pathway, including activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases and protein kinase B (Akt), a serine/threonine-specific protein kinase that is crucial for glucose metabolism. This insulinomimetic effect of Zn has been implicated in the glucose-lowering effect of synthetic insulins (see above); insulinomimetic Zn complexes have been synthesised and evaluated both in vitro and in vivo in diabetic animal models(Reference Yoshikawa, Adachi and Yasui87). Moreover, oral administration of Zn complexes that increase Zn absorption from the gastrointestinal tract have been found to significantly improve hyperglycaemia, glucose intolerance and insulin resistance in KKAy mice, an obesity-linked type 2 diabetic mouse model, strongly suggesting that increased Zn absorption, or Zn supplementation therapy, is helpful in decreasing blood glucose levels in diabetes(Reference Adachi, Yoshida and Kodera88). Activation of insulin signalling through phosphorylation of Akt by Zn insulinomimetics occurrs in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. The Zn-dependent effect of small molecules on insulin signalling has been shown to act on downstream effectors such as the transcription factor FOXO1a (forkhead box protein O1a) and the key gluconeogenic regulatory enzymes phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and glucose 6-phosphatase(Reference Cameron, Anil and Sutherland89). Zn insulinomimetics eventually induce the translocation of the GLUT4 protein to the plasma membrane, where it promotes glucose transport from blood to muscle cells and adipocytes(Reference Basuki, Hiromura and Sakurai90).

Since Zn activates the whole pathway of insulin signalling, it has to act very early on in this pathway, at or close to the insulin receptor. Indeed, the phosphorylation of three tyrosine residues central to the activity of the insulin receptor is increased by Zn treatment(Reference Haase and Maret91). Conversely, Zn chelation reduces phosphorylation of the insulin receptor upon insulin treatment of C6 rat glioma cells. Experiments using Zn ionophores excluded the interaction of Zn with the extracellular domain of the insulin receptor, suggesting that the effect of Zn in the phosphorylation of the insulin receptor occurred intracellularly. Hence, Zn has been shown to inhibit protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTP). PTP 1B, the key phosphatase implicated in the dephosphorylation of the insulin receptor, has a half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) in the range of physiologically available Zn levels, i.e. in the low nanomolar range(Reference Haase and Maret92). Moreover, kinetic analysis revealed that Zn ions are reversible inhibitors of the cytoplasmic catalytic domain of the receptor protein-tyrosine phosphatase β(Reference Wilson, Hogstrand and Maret93). Here, again, inhibition is in the range of intracellular free Zn ion concentrations. Hence, intracellular, available free Zn levels regulate insulin signalling; this may be a crosstalk provided by Zn ions between the cell's response to glucose levels and redox state of the cell. Indeed, glucose metabolism induces the production of reactive oxygen species, especially H2O2, which in turn can oxidise MT and increase free Zn levels (see above), thereby providing a means to fine tune insulin signalling and glucose transport into the target organ cells. Since pancreatic β-cells also express the insulin receptor, the Zn co-secreted with insulin, and re-uptaken mainly by long-life (L)-type Ca channels(Reference Gyulkhandanyan, Lee and Bikopoulos94), may act as an autocrine signalling ion for β-cell glucose metabolism.

Zinc signalling and α-cells

Pancreatic α-cells secrete glucagon, a hormone that has the opposite action to that of insulin. Glucagon is released during hypoglycaemia, and increases blood glucose levels by stimulating hepatic glucose output(Reference Gromada, Franklin and Wollheim95). Among different mediators of α-cell function, Zn, as insulin, has been proposed to be a paracrine signalling molecule co-secreted with insulin from β-cells despite some contradictory results in different studies(Reference Hardy, Serino and Wijesekara96). Since Zn can exert a strong modulatory effect on synaptic function in the brain (for a review, see Sensi et al. (Reference Sensi, Paoletti and Bush97)), the hypothesis that Zn might regulate glucagon secretion was first tested in isolated pancreas(Reference Ishihara, Maechler and Gjinovci39). Zn was found to have an inhibitory action on glucagon secretion. Studies from the same group revealed that in isolated α-cells, the mechanism by which exogenous Zn inhibited glucagon secretion resulted from direct activation of K (KATP) channels(Reference Franklin, Gromada and Gjinovci98). However, monitoring of free cytosolic concentrations of ATP and Ca both in α-cells and intact islets confirmed the effect of insulin but failed to reveal any effect of Zn on the suppression of glucagon secretion by glucose(Reference Ravier and Rutter99). Using the perifusion technique and drugs that manipulates KATP channels, Robertson et al. (Reference Robertson, Zhou and Slucca100) confirmed that Zn interacts at KATP channels to provide tonic suppression of glucagon secretion. Nevertheless, when studying glucagon secretion in islets isolated from β-cell-specific ZnT8 knockout mice, which contain and secrete less Zn than wild-type islets, no effect on glucagon secretion was observed, though the ability of exogenous Zn to inhibit glucagon secretion was still preserved in these islets(Reference Hardy, Serino and Wijesekara96). This discrepancy in some experiments suggested that an overlap or redundancy in the mechanisms of inhibition of glucagon secretion might exist. Further studies will be clearly needed to fully understand the interaction between Zn and the other paracrine factors and/or direct effects of glucose on α-cells.

Dietary zinc supplementation and diabetes

The predominant effect of diabetes on body Zn homeostasis is to induce hypozincaemia, hyperzincuria, decreased gastrointestinal absorption of Zn or even increased urinary excretion(Reference Chausmer101). As early as in the 1930s, Scott discovered that the amount of Zn contained in the pancreas of diabetics patients was only one-half that of non-diabetics(Reference Scott and Fisher5). In a diabetic population, serum Zn levels were significantly reduced as compared with controls(Reference Garg, Gupta and Goyal102). In patients with type 1 diabetes, Zn concentrations in erythrocytes presented lower than normal values(Reference de Sena, Arrais and das Gracas Almeida103). Moreover, a significant reduction of serum Zn in both type 1 and type 2 diabetic patients was very recently confirmed by the group of Rink. In this case, Zn supplementation elevated intracellular Zn concentrations and increased insulin signalling(Reference Jansen, Rosenkranz and Overbeck104).

Since Zn plays a crucial role in the processes of synthesis, storage and secretion of insulin (see above), the hypozincaemia observed in diabetes might worsen the diabetic condition, especially for type 2 diabetes. Moreover, Zn deficiency will increase intracellular oxidants and free radical production, while concomitantly decreasing Zn-dependent antioxidant enzymes and MT expression, thereby affecting the viability of the islet cells and impairing the situation a little further(Reference Chimienti, Rutter, Wheeler and Rink105). Therefore, it has been suggested that oral Zn supplementation may have a role in therapy, since an overall analysis of the scientific literature advocates beneficial effects on both glycaemic control and lipid parameters(Reference Jayawardena, Ranasinghe and Galappatthy106). Reduced pancreatic Zn content is also evident in several genetic mouse models of type 2 diabetes; Zn supplementation has led to promising results. In mice carrying a mutation in the leptin receptor (db/db mice), Zn supplementation has been shown to normalise pancreatic Zn levels and attenuate hyperglycaemia and hyperinsulinaemia(Reference Simon and Taylor107). Similarly, Zn supplementation in ob/ob mice (mutation in the leptin gene) increased islet insulin content and attenuated fasting hyperglycaemia(Reference Begin-Heick, Dalpe-Scott and Rowe108).

However, Zn supplementation in human subjects has yielded contradictory results, principally because the dosage and the Zn species used were different. In the very first study of Zn supplementation in diabetic individuals, no correlation between serum Zn and HbA1c levels was found. Zn supplementation for 8 weeks did not affect HbA1c levels in patients, though twenty times the daily recommended dose (usually 10 mg/d) was administered(Reference Niewoehner, Allen and Boosalis109). Importantly, in a study confirming that hypozincaemia was mainly due to increased zincuria in diabetics, dietary Zn was even found to aggravate glucose intolerance(Reference Raz, Karsai and Katz110). A few years later, another study reported a statistically significant increase in insulin and serum Zn levels, along with a concomitant decrease in fasting blood glucose after 3 weeks of dietary Zn supplementation in diabetic patients(Reference Hegazi, Ahmed and Mekkawy111), suggesting that supplementation with Zn might be useful to reduce plasma glucose in diabetics. However, even though the beneficial effect of Zn supplementation for blood glucose and HbA1c levels has been confirmed, the effect of Zn supplementation on insulin levels still remains controversial(Reference Gunasekara, Hettiarachchi and Liyanage112). A study conducted in India on type 2 diabetes mellitus patients with neuropathy also found that supplemental zinc sulfate given orally for 6 weeks normalised Zn and blood sugar levels(Reference Gupta, Garg and Mathur113). However, in this case the very high dosage for the study, i.e. 600 mg/d, limits extrapolation to dietary supplementation and comparison with other reports. Indeed, in another study on type 2 diabetes patients suffering neuropathy supplemented with comparable dose and duration (660 mg zinc sulfate/d; 6 weeks) a better glycaemic control was observed, along with an improvement in peripheral neuropathy(Reference Hayee, Mohammad and Haque114). Approximately the same dosage (200 mg three times per d) for 2 months was used by Marchesini et al. (Reference Marchesini, Bugianesi and Ronchi115), who could thus show in patients with cirrhosis that long-term oral Zn supplementation normalised plasma Zn levels and improved glucose tolerance(Reference Marchesini, Bugianesi and Ronchi115).

In additional studies with slightly higher than normal daily requirements, supplemental Zn in diabetics both restored serum Zn levels and significantly decreased the mean value for HbA1c percentage at the end of the 3 months of follow up, while no significant changes were found in the control group(Reference Al-Maroof and Al-Sharbatti116). Similarly, treatment of diabetic patients with 50 mg zinc gluconate/d improved both fasting plasma glucose and HbA1c percentage levels(Reference Hussain, Khadim and Khalaf117). However, in the latter report C-peptide levels were not affected, suggesting that improvement of the diabetic condition takes place by a mechanism different from that of increased insulin secretion, possibly through an increase in insulin sensitivity. In a very recent study, Zn supplementation improved glycaemic control measured by HbA1c percentage and both fasting and postprandial glucose. Furthermore, Zn supplementation also lowered serum cholesterol and cholesterol:HDL ratio, suggesting that Zn may inhibit the activation of oxidative stress-responsive proteins(Reference Gunasekara, Hettiarachchi and Liyanage112). To further highlight the beneficial effects of Zn supplementation in type 2 diabetes, a pioneering study by Faure et al. showed that after 3 months of zinc gluconate treatment (30 mg daily), markers of oxidative stress, including lipid peroxidation markers, were decreased and antioxidant enzyme activity was increased, suggesting a protective effect of Zn for pancreatic β-cells(Reference Faure, Benhamou and Perard118). Two others studies confirmed this antioxidant effect of Zn supplementation in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus(Reference Anderson, Roussel and Zouari119, Reference Roussel, Kerkeni and Zouari120). Moreover, during a 5-year follow-up of antioxidant supplementation in type 2 diabetic retinopathy, the retinopathy stage showed a retardation of progression in the subgroup with supplementation, along with preservation of its antioxidant plasma status levels(Reference Garcia-Medina, Pinazo-Duran and Garcia-Medina121). Diabetes induces oxidative stress through hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia, both of which cause damage to multiple organs, thus leading to various complications. The innovative work of Cai and colleagues on the role of Zn in diabetic complications showed that the ability of Zn to induce MT significantly protects heart and kidney against diabetes-induced pathophysiological changes(Reference Wei, Liu and Tan122), thereby suggesting that Zn supplementation may play an important role in the prevention of the development of diabetes and its complications.

However, it should be noted that the analysis of dietary and total Zn intake studies might be complicated by the existence of polymorphisms in SLC30A8 and MT1A linked to type 2 diabetes. In fact, a meta-analysis of fourteen cohort studies identified a nominally significant interaction between total Zn intake and a SLC30A8 variant on fasting glucose levels(Reference Kanoni, Nettleton and Hivert123). This analysis suggested that Zn intake might modify the effects of glucose-raising genetic loci. In other terms, it might be of importance to take into account gene–environment interactions in future studies on total and dietary Zn intake and diabetes.

Conclusion and perspectives

The interest of the scientific community in the role of Zn in diabetes has been continually increasing, from studies investigating the effect of Zn supplementation in the prevention, treatment and complications of diabetes (for example, renal failure, vision disorders, macrovascular complications) to the discovery of polymorphisms in Zn genes, for example, ZnT8 and MT, linked to diabetes by recent genome-wide association studies. In the last decade, genetic and functional studies have allowed a better understanding of the importance of Zn for pancreatic islet cells at the molecular level. It is now obvious that Zn has beneficial effects in many steps of diabetes pathophysiology, including insulin synthesis and secretion, β-cell function and mass, islet cell communication, protection of complications, and immune system modulation in type 1 diabetes. The overall beneficial effects of Zn supplementation on blood glucose control in both types of diabetes suggest that Zn is a candidate ion for diabetes prevention and therapy. Zn supplementation could be a simple way to improve clinical parameters, for example, blood glucose and lipid profile, in diabetics; ZnT8 and/or MT might be promising therapeutic targets for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Nevertheless, more studies are needed to unravel the exact role(s) of Zn ions in the pancreatic β-cell and in islet cell-to-cell communication. Moreover, future clinical studies with Zn supplementation normalized with gene–environment interaction are necessary to evaluate accurately the role of dietary Zn and to compare results of different studies between diverse populations and/or dosage.

Acknowledgements

F. C. is employed by Mellitech SAS. The present review received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

References

1Banting, FG, Best, CH, Collip, JB, et al. (1922) Pancreatic extracts in the treatment of diabetes mellitus. Can Med Assoc J 12, 141146.Google ScholarPubMed
2Abel, JJ (1926) Crystalline insulin. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 12, 132136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
3Scott, DA (1934) Crystalline insulin. Biochem J 28, 15921602.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4Scott, DA & Fisher, AM (1935) The effect of zinc salts on the action of insulin. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 55, 206211.Google Scholar
5Scott, DA & Fisher, AM (1938) The insulin and the zinc content of normal and diabetic pancreas. J Clin Invest 17, 725728.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
6Sanger, F (1949) Species differences in insulins. Nature 164, 524529.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7Brown, H, Sanger, F & Kitai, R (1955) The structure of pig and sheep insulins. Biochem J 60, 556565.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
8Adams, MJ, Blundell, TL, Dodson, GG, et al. (1969) Structure of rhombohedral 2 zinc insulin crystals. Nature 224, 491495.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
9Rabinowitch, IM, Foster, JS, Fowler, AF, et al. (1936) Clinical experiences with protamine–zinc–insulin and other mixtures of zinc and insulin in diabetes mellitus. Can Med Assoc J 35, 239252.Google ScholarPubMed
10Rabinowitch, IM, Fowler, AF & Corcoran, AC (1937) Further observations on the use of protamine zinc insulin in diabetes mellitus. Can Med Assoc J 36, 111129.Google ScholarPubMed
11Lacey, AH (1952) A comparison of preparations of NPH insulin. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 105, 196202.Google ScholarPubMed
12Becker, RH & Frick, AD (2008) Clinical pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of insulin glulisine. Clin Pharmacokinet 47, 720.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13Anderson, JH & Campbell, RK (1990) Mixing insulins in 1990. Diabetes Educ 16, 380387.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
14Planchart, A (1965) Potentiation of insulin action by calcium and magnesium. Diabetes 14, 430431.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
15Devis, G, Somers, G, Van Obberghen, E, et al. (1975) Calcium antagonists and islet function. I. Inhibition of insulin release by verapamil. Diabetes 24, 247251.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
16Grynkiewicz, G, Poenie, M & Tsien, RY (1985) A new generation of Ca2+ indicators with greatly improved fluorescence properties. J Biol Chem 260, 34403450.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
17Henquin, JC (2000) Triggering and amplifying pathways of regulation of insulin secretion by glucose. Diabetes 49, 17511760.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
18Zalewski, PD, Forbes, IJ & Betts, WH (1993) Correlation of apoptosis with change in intracellular labile Zn(II) using zinquin [(2-methyl-8-p-toluenesulphonamido-6-quinolyloxy)acetic acid], a new specific fluorescent probe for Zn(II). Biochem J 296, 403408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19Zalewski, PD, Millard, SH, Forbes, IJ, et al. (1994) Video image analysis of labile zinc in viable pancreatic islet cells using a specific fluorescent probe for zinc. J Histochem Cytochem 42, 877884.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
20Palmiter, RD & Findley, SD (1995) Cloning and functional characterization of a mammalian zinc transporter that confers resistance to zinc. EMBO J 14, 639649.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
21Palmiter, RD, Cole, TB & Findley, SD (1996) ZnT-2, a mammalian protein that confers resistance to zinc by facilitating vesicular sequestration. EMBO J 15, 17841791.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
22Palmiter, RD, Cole, TB, Quaife, CJ, et al. (1996) ZnT-3, a putative transporter of zinc into synaptic vesicles. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 93, 1493414939.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
23Grotz, N, Fox, T, Connolly, E, et al. (1998) Identification of a family of zinc transporter genes from Arabidopsis that respond to zinc deficiency. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 95, 72207224.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
24Eide, DJ (2004) The SLC39 family of metal ion transporters. Pflugers Arch 447, 796800.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
25Burdette, SC, Walkup, GK, Spingler, B, et al. (2001) Fluorescent sensors for Zn2+ based on a fluorescein platform: synthesis, properties and intracellular distribution. J Am Chem Soc 123, 78317841.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
26Lichten, LA & Cousins, RJ (2009) Mammalian zinc transporters: nutritional and physiologic regulation. Annu Rev Nutr 29, 153176.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
27Cousins, RJ & Lichten, LA (2011) Zinc transporters. In Zinc in Human Health, pp. 136162 [Rink, L, editor]. Amsterdam: IOS Press.Google Scholar
28Plum, LM, Rink, L & Haase, H (2010) The essential toxin: impact of zinc on human health. Int J Environ Res Public Health 7, 13421365.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
29Kim, BE, Wang, F, Dufner-Beattie, J, et al. (2004) Zn2+-stimulated endocytosis of the mZIP4 zinc transporter regulates its location at the plasma membrane. J Biol Chem 279, 45234530.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
30Taylor, KM, Hiscox, S, Nicholson, RI, et al. (2012) Protein kinase CK2 triggers cytosolic zinc signaling pathways by phosphorylation of zinc channel ZIP7. Sci Signal 5, ra11.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
31Beharier, O, Dror, S, Levy, S, et al. (2012) ZnT-1 protects HL-1 cells from simulated ischemia–reperfusion through activation of Ras-ERK signaling. J Mol Med (Berl) 90, 127138.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
32Kury, S, Dreno, B, Bezieau, S, et al. (2002) Identification of SLC39A4, a gene involved in acrodermatitis enteropathica. Nat Genet 31, 239240.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
33Kiechl-Kohlendorfer, U, Fink, FM & Steichen-Gersdorf, E (2007) Transient symptomatic Zn deficiency in a breast-fed preterm infant. Pediatr Dermatol 24, 536540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
34Yang, L, Li, H, Yu, T, et al. (2008) Polymorphisms in metallothionein-1 and -2 genes associated with the risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus and its complications. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 294, E987E992.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
35Sladek, R, Rocheleau, G, Rung, J, et al. (2007) A genome-wide association study identifies novel risk loci for type 2 diabetes. Nature 445, 881885.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
36Kambe, T (2011) An overview of a wide range of functions of ZnT and Zip zinc transporters in the secretory pathway. Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 75, 10361043.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
37Dodson, G & Steiner, D (1998) The role of assembly in insulin's biosynthesis. Curr Opin Struct Biol 8, 189194.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
38Foster, MC, Leapman, RD, Li, MX, et al. (1993) Elemental composition of secretory granules in pancreatic islets of Langerhans. Biophys J 64, 525532.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
39Ishihara, H, Maechler, P, Gjinovci, A, et al. (2003) Islet β-cell secretion determines glucagon release from neighbouring α-cells. Nat Cell Biol 5, 330335.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
40Dunn, MF (2005) Zinc–ligand interactions modulate assembly and stability of the insulin hexamer – a review. Biometals 18, 295303.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
41Wijesekara, N, Chimienti, F & Wheeler, MB (2009) Zinc, a regulator of islet function and glucose homeostasis. Diabetes Obes Metab 11, Suppl. 4, 202214.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
42Kambe, T, Narita, H, Yamaguchi-Iwai, Y, et al. (2002) Cloning and characterization of a novel mammalian zinc transporter, zinc transporter 5, abundantly expressed in pancreatic β cells. J Biol Chem 277, 1904919055.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
43Smidt, K, Rungby, J, et al. (2012) ZnT3: a zinc transporter active in several organs. Biometals 25, 18.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
44Smidt, K, Jessen, N, Petersen, AB, et al. (2009) SLC30A3 responds to glucose- and zinc variations in β-cells and is critical for insulin production and in vivo glucose-metabolism during β-cell stress. PLoS One 4, e5684.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
45Petersen, AB, Smidt, K, Magnusson, NE, et al. (2011) siRNA-mediated knock-down of ZnT3 and ZnT8 affects production and secretion of insulin and apoptosis in INS-1E cells. APMIS 119, 93102.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
46Chimienti, F, Devergnas, S, Favier, A, et al. (2004) Identification and cloning of a β-cell-specific zinc transporter, ZnT-8, localized into insulin secretory granules. Diabetes 53, 23302337.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
47Smidt, K, Pedersen, SB, Brock, B, et al. (2007) Zn-transporter genes in human visceral and subcutaneous adipocytes: lean versus obese. Mol Cell Endocrinol 264, 6873.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
48Murgia, C, Devirgiliis, C, Mancini, E, et al. (2009) Diabetes-linked zinc transporter ZnT8 is a homodimeric protein expressed by distinct rodent endocrine cell types in the pancreas and other glands. Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis 19, 431439.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
49Chimienti, F, Devergnas, S, Pattou, F, et al. (2006) In vivo expression and functional characterization of the zinc transporter ZnT8 in glucose-induced insulin secretion. J Cell Sci 119, 41994206.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
50Zeggini, E, Weedon, MN, Lindgren, CM, et al. (2007) Replication of genome-wide association signals in UK samples reveals risk loci for type 2 diabetes. Science 316, 13361341.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
51Nicolson, TJ, Bellomo, EA, Wijesekara, N, et al. (2009) Insulin storage and glucose homeostasis in mice null for the granule zinc transporter ZnT8 and studies of the type 2 diabetes-associated variants. Diabetes 58, 20702083.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
52Dupuis, J, Langenberg, C, Prokopenko, I, et al. (2010) New genetic loci implicated in fasting glucose homeostasis and their impact on type 2 diabetes risk. Nat Genet 42, 105116.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
53Steinthorsdottir, V, Thorleifsson, G, Reynisdottir, I, et al. (2007) A variant in CDKAL1 influences insulin response and risk of type 2 diabetes. Nat Genet 39, 770775.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
54Staiger, H, Machicao, F, Stefan, N, et al. (2007) Polymorphisms within novel risk loci for type 2 diabetes determine β-cell function. PLoS ONE 2, e832.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
55Kang, ES, Kim, MS, Kim, YS, et al. (2008) A polymorphism in the zinc transporter gene SLC30A8 confers resistance against posttransplantation diabetes mellitus in renal allograft recipients. Diabetes 57, 10431047.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
56Pare, G, Chasman, DI, Parker, AN, et al. (2008) Novel association of HK1 with glycated hemoglobin in a non-diabetic population: a genome-wide evaluation of 14,618 participants in the Women's Genome Health Study. PLoS Genet 4, e1000312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
57Cauchi, S, Del Guerra, S, Choquet, H, et al. (2010) Meta-analysis and functional effects of the SLC30A8 rs13266634 polymorphism on isolated human pancreatic islets. Mol Genet Metab 100, 7782.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
58Lemaire, K, Ravier, MA, Schraenen, A, et al. (2009) Insulin crystallization depends on zinc transporter ZnT8 expression, but is not required for normal glucose homeostasis in mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106, 1487214877.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
59Pound, LD, Sarkar, S, Benninger, RK, et al. (2009) Deletion of the mouse Slc30a8 gene encoding zinc transporter-8 results in impaired insulin secretion. Biochem J 421, 371376.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
60Wijesekara, N, Dai, FF, Hardy, AB, et al. (2010) Beta cell-specific Znt8 deletion in mice causes marked defects in insulin processing, crystallisation and secretion. Diabetologia 53, 16561668.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
61Fu, Y, Tian, W, Pratt, EB, et al. (2009) Down-regulation of ZnT8 expression in INS-1 rat pancreatic beta cells reduces insulin content and glucose-inducible insulin secretion. PLoS ONE 4, e5679.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
62Hardy, AB, Wijesekara, N, Genkin, I, et al. (2012) Effects of high-fat diet feeding on Znt8-null mice: differences between β-cell and global knockout of Znt8. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 302, E1084E1096.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
63Islam, MS & du Loots, T (2007) Diabetes, metallothionein, and zinc interactions: a review. Biofactors 29, 203212.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
64Maret, W (2011) Redox biochemistry of mammalian metallothioneins. J Biol Inorg Chem 16, 10791086.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
65Levadoux, M, Mahon, C, Beattie, JH, et al. (1999) Nuclear import of metallothionein requires its mRNA to be associated with the perinuclear cytoskeleton. J Biol Chem 274, 3496134966.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
66Chen, H, Carlson, EC, Pellet, L, et al. (2001) Overexpression of metallothionein in pancreatic β-cells reduces streptozotocin-induced DNA damage and diabetes. Diabetes 50, 20402046.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
67Park, L, Min, D, Kim, H, et al. (2011) Tat-enhanced delivery of metallothionein can partially prevent the development of diabetes. Free Radic Biol Med 51, 16661674.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
68Maret, W & Vallee, BL (1998) Thiolate ligands in metallothionein confer redox activity on zinc clusters. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 95, 34783482.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
69Stitt, MS, Wasserloos, KJ, Tang, X, et al. (2006) Nitric oxide-induced nuclear translocation of the metal responsive transcription factor, MTF-1 is mediated by zinc release from metallothionein. Vascul Pharmacol 44, 149155.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
70Giacconi, R, Bonfigli, AR, Testa, R, et al. (2008) +647 A/C and +1245 MT1A polymorphisms in the susceptibility of diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular complications. Mol Genet Metab 94, 98104.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
71Giacconi, R, Cipriano, C, Muti, E, et al. (2005) Novel –209A/G MT2A polymorphism in old patients with type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis: relationship with inflammation (IL-6) and zinc. Biogerontology 6, 407413.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
72Mocchegiani, E, Giacconi, R & Malavolta, M (2008) Zinc signalling and subcellular distribution: emerging targets in type 2 diabetes. Trends Mol Med 14, 419428.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
73Seve, M, Chimienti, F & Favier, A (2002) Role of intracellular zinc in programmed cell death. Pathol Biol (Paris) 50, 212221.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
74Baynes, JW (1991) Role of oxidative stress in development of complications in diabetes. Diabetes 40, 405412.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
75Chang, I, Cho, N, Koh, JY, et al. (2003) Pyruvate inhibits zinc-mediated pancreatic islet cell death and diabetes. Diabetologia 46, 12201227.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
76Bellomo, EA, Meur, G & Rutter, GA (2011) Glucose regulates free cytosolic Zn2+ concentration, Slc39 (ZiP), and metallothionein gene expression in primary pancreatic islet β-cells. J Biol Chem 286, 2577825789.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
77Lieberman, SM & DiLorenzo, TP (2003) A comprehensive guide to antibody and T-cell responses in type 1 diabetes. Tissue Antigens 62, 359377.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
78Haase, H & Rink, L (2009) Functional significance of zinc-related signaling pathways in immune cells. Annu Rev Nutr 29, 133152.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
79Wenzlau, JM, Juhl, K, Yu, L, et al. (2007) The cation efflux transporter ZnT8 (Slc30A8) is a major autoantigen in human type 1 diabetes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104, 1704017045.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
80Vaziri-Sani, F, Oak, S, Radtke, J, et al. (2010) ZnT8 autoantibody titers in type 1 diabetes patients decline rapidly after clinical onset. Autoimmunity 43, 598606.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
81Énée, E, Kratzer, R, Arnoux, JB, et al. (2012) ZnT8 is a major CD8+T cell-recognized autoantigen in pediatric type 1 diabetes. Diabetes 61, 17791784.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
82Gohlke, H, Ferrari, U, Koczwara, K, et al. (2008) SLC30A8 (ZnT8) polymorphism is associated with young age at type 1 diabetes onset. Rev Diabet Stud 5, 2527.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
83Kerr-Conte, J, Vandewalle, B, Moerman, E, et al. (2010) Upgrading pretransplant human islet culture technology requires human serum combined with media renewal. Transplantation 89, 11541160.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
84Okamoto, T, Kuroki, T, Adachi, T, et al. (2011) Effect of zinc on early graft failure following intraportal islet transplantation in rat recipients. Ann Transplant 16, 114120.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
85Coulston, L & Dandona, P (1980) Insulin-like effect of zinc on adipocytes. Diabetes 29, 665667.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
86May, JM & Contoreggi, CS (1982) The mechanism of the insulin-like effects of ionic zinc. J Biol Chem 257, 43624368.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
87Yoshikawa, Y, Adachi, Y, Yasui, H, et al. (2011) Oral administration of Bis(aspirinato)zinc(II) complex ameliorates hyperglycemia and metabolic syndrome-like disorders in spontaneously diabetic KK-Ay mice: structure–activity relationship on zinc–salicylate complexes. Chem Pharm Bull (Tokyo) 59, 972977.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
88Adachi, Y, Yoshida, J, Kodera, Y, et al. (2006) Oral administration of a zinc complex improves type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndromes. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 351, 165170.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
89Cameron, AR, Anil, S, Sutherland, E, et al. (2010) Zinc-dependent effects of small molecules on the insulin-sensitive transcription factor FOXO1a and gluconeogenic genes. Metallomics 2, 195203.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
90Basuki, W, Hiromura, M & Sakurai, H (2007) Insulinomimetic Zn complex (Zn(opt)2) enhances insulin signaling pathway in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. J Inorg Biochem 101, 692699.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
91Haase, H & Maret, W (2005) Fluctuations of cellular, available zinc modulate insulin signaling via inhibition of protein tyrosine phosphatases. J Trace Elem Med Biol 19, 3742.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
92Haase, H, Maret, W, et al. (2005) Protein tyrosine phosphatases as targets of the combined insulinomimetic effects of zinc and oxidants. Biometals 18, 333338.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
93Wilson, M, Hogstrand, C & Maret, W (2012) Picomolar concentrations of free zinc(II) ions regulate receptor protein-tyrosine phosphatase β activity. J Biol Chem 287, 93229326.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
94Gyulkhandanyan, AV, Lee, SC, Bikopoulos, G, et al. (2006) The Zn2+-transporting pathways in pancreatic β-cells: a role for the L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channel. J Biol Chem 281, 93619372.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
95Gromada, J, Franklin, I & Wollheim, CB (2007) α-Cells of the endocrine pancreas: 35 years of research but the enigma remains. Endocr Rev 28, 84116.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
96Hardy, AB, Serino, AS, Wijesekara, N, et al. (2011) Regulation of glucagon secretion by zinc: lessons from the β cell-specific Znt8 knockout mouse model. Diabetes Obes Metab 13, Suppl. 1, 112117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
97Sensi, SL, Paoletti, P, Bush, AI, et al. (2009) Zinc in the physiology and pathology of the CNS. Nat Rev Neurosci 10, 780791.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
98Franklin, I, Gromada, J, Gjinovci, A, et al. (2005) β-Cell secretory products activate α-cell ATP-dependent potassium channels to inhibit glucagon release. Diabetes 54, 18081815.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
99Ravier, MA & Rutter, GA (2005) Glucose or insulin, but not zinc ions, inhibit glucagon secretion from mouse pancreatic α-cells. Diabetes 54, 17891797.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
100Robertson, RP, Zhou, H & Slucca, M (2011) A role for zinc in pancreatic islet β-cell cross-talk with the α-cell during hypoglycaemia. Diabetes Obes Metab 13, Suppl. 1, 106111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
101Chausmer, AB (1998) Zinc, insulin and diabetes. J Am Coll Nutr 17, 109115.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
102Garg, VK, Gupta, R & Goyal, RK (1994) Hypozincemia in diabetes mellitus. J Assoc Physicians India 42, 720721.Google ScholarPubMed
103de Sena, KC, Arrais, RF, das Gracas Almeida, M, et al. (2005) Effects of Zn supplementation in patients with type 1 diabetes. Biol Trace Elem Res 105, 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
104Jansen, J, Rosenkranz, E, Overbeck, S, et al. (2012) Disturbed zinc homeostasis in diabetic patients by in vitro and in vivo analysis of insulinomimetic activity of zinc. J Nutr Biochem 23, 14581466.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
105Chimienti, F, Rutter, GA, Wheeler, MB, et al (2011) Zinc and diabetes. In Zinc in Human Health, pp. 493513 [Rink, L, editor]. Amsterdam: IOS Press.Google Scholar
106Jayawardena, R, Ranasinghe, P, Galappatthy, P, et al. (2012) Effects of zinc supplementation on diabetes mellitus: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Diabetol Metab Syndr 4, 13.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
107Simon, SF & Taylor, CG (2001) Dietary zinc supplementation attenuates hyperglycemia in db/db mice. Exp Biol Med (Maywood) 226, 4351.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
108Begin-Heick, N, Dalpe-Scott, M, Rowe, J, et al. (1985) Zinc supplementation attenuates insulin secretory activity in pancreatic islets of the ob/ob mouse. Diabetes 34, 179184.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
109Niewoehner, CB, Allen, JI, Boosalis, M, et al. (1986) Role of zinc supplementation in type II diabetes mellitus. Am J Med 81, 6368.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
110Raz, I, Karsai, D & Katz, M (1989) The influence of zinc supplementation on glucose homeostasis in NIDDM. Diabetes Res 11, 7379.Google ScholarPubMed
111Hegazi, SM, Ahmed, SS, Mekkawy, AA, et al. (1992) Effect of zinc supplementation on serum glucose, insulin, glucagon, glucose-6-phosphatase and mineral levels in diabetics. J Clin Biochem Nutr 12, 209215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
112Gunasekara, P, Hettiarachchi, M, Liyanage, C, et al. (2011) Effects of zinc and multimineral vitamin supplementation on glycemic and lipid control in adult diabetes. Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes 4, 5360.Google ScholarPubMed
113Gupta, R, Garg, VK, Mathur, DK, et al. (1998) Oral zinc therapy in diabetic neuropathy. J Assoc Physicians India 46, 939942.Google ScholarPubMed
114Hayee, MA, Mohammad, QD & Haque, A (2005) Diabetic neuropathy and zinc therapy. Bangladesh Med Res Counc Bull 31, 6267.Google ScholarPubMed
115Marchesini, G, Bugianesi, E, Ronchi, M, et al. (1998) Zinc supplementation improves glucose disposal in patients with cirrhosis. Metabolism 47, 792798.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
116Al-Maroof, RA & Al-Sharbatti, SS (2006) Serum zinc levels in diabetic patients and effect of zinc supplementation on glycemic control of type 2 diabetics. Saudi Med J 27, 344350.Google ScholarPubMed
117Hussain, SA, Khadim, HM, Khalaf, BH, et al. (2006) Effects of melatonin and zinc on glycemic control in type 2 diabetic patients poorly controlled with metformin. Saudi Med J 27, 14831488.Google ScholarPubMed
118Faure, P, Benhamou, PY, Perard, A, et al. (1995) Lipid peroxidation in insulin-dependent diabetic patients with early retina degenerative lesions: effects of an oral zinc supplementation. Eur J Clin Nutr 49, 282288.Google ScholarPubMed
119Anderson, RA, Roussel, AM, Zouari, N, et al. (2001) Potential antioxidant effects of zinc and chromium supplementation in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus. J Am Coll Nutr 20, 212218.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
120Roussel, AM, Kerkeni, A, Zouari, N, et al. (2003) Antioxidant effects of zinc supplementation in Tunisians with type 2 diabetes mellitus. J Am Coll Nutr 22, 316321.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
121Garcia-Medina, JJ, Pinazo-Duran, MD, Garcia-Medina, M, et al. (2011) A 5-year follow-up of antioxidant supplementation in type 2 diabetic retinopathy. Eur J Ophthalmol 21, 637643.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
122Wei, W, Liu, Q, Tan, Y, et al. (2009) Oxidative stress, diabetes, and diabetic complications. Hemoglobin 33, 370377.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
123Kanoni, S, Nettleton, JA, Hivert, MF, et al. (2011) Total zinc intake may modify the glucose-raising effect of a zinc transporter (SLC30A8) variant: a 14-cohort meta-analysis. Diabetes 60, 24072416.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Mechanisms of zinc homeostasis in the β-cell: intracellular free cytosolic zinc, which can be either imported through Zrt-like, Irt-like protein (ZIP) transporters or released from metallothionein (MT) during oxidative stress, can be imported into insulin granules through zinc transporter ZnT8 to form crystalline insulin–zinc hexamers. Zinc can also bind to metal-responsive transcription factor-1 (MTF-1), which translocates to the nucleus and further up-regulates MT synthesis. MT-Ox, oxidised MT; ROS, reactive oxygen species.