- Wortham, Matthew;
- Liu, Fenfen;
- Harrington, Austin R;
- Fleischman, Johanna Y;
- Wallace, Martina;
- Mulas, Francesca;
- Mallick, Medhavi;
- Vinckier, Nicholas K;
- Cross, Benjamin R;
- Chiou, Joshua;
- Patel, Nisha A;
- Sui, Yinghui;
- McGrail, Carolyn;
- Jun, Yesl;
- Wang, Gaowei;
- Jhala, Ulupi S;
- Schüle, Roland;
- Shirihai, Orian S;
- Huising, Mark O;
- Gaulton, Kyle J;
- Metallo, Christian M;
- Sander, Maike
Adaptation of the islet β cell insulin-secretory response to changing insulin demand is critical for blood glucose homeostasis, yet the mechanisms underlying this adaptation are unknown. Here, we have shown that nutrient-stimulated histone acetylation plays a key role in adapting insulin secretion through regulation of genes involved in β cell nutrient sensing and metabolism. Nutrient regulation of the epigenome occurred at sites occupied by the chromatin-modifying enzyme lysine-specific demethylase 1 (Lsd1) in islets. β Cell-specific deletion of Lsd1 led to insulin hypersecretion, aberrant expression of nutrient-response genes, and histone hyperacetylation. Islets from mice adapted to chronically increased insulin demand exhibited shared epigenetic and transcriptional changes. Moreover, we found that genetic variants associated with type 2 diabetes were enriched at LSD1-bound sites in human islets, suggesting that interpretation of nutrient signals is genetically determined and clinically relevant. Overall, these studies revealed that adaptive insulin secretion involves Lsd1-mediated coupling of nutrient state to regulation of the islet epigenome.