TRAF6 integrates innate immune signals to regulate glucose homeostasis via Parkin-dependent and -independent mitophagy
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Activation of innate immune signaling occurs during the progression of immunometabolic diseases, including type 2 diabetes (T2D), yet the impact of innate immune signaling on glucose homeostasis is controversial. Here, we report that the E3 ubiquitin ligase TRAF6 integrates innate immune signals following diet-induced obesity to promote glucose homeostasis through the induction of mitophagy. Whereas TRAF6 was dispensable for glucose homeostasis and pancreatic β-cell function under basal conditions, TRAF6 was pivotal for insulin secretion, mitochondrial respiration, and increases in mitophagy following metabolic stress in both mouse and human islets. Indeed, TRAF6 was critical for the recruitment and function of machinery within both the ubiquitin-mediated (Parkin-dependent) and receptor-mediated (Parkin-independent) mitophagy pathways upon metabolic stress. Intriguingly, the effect of TRAF6 deficiency on glucose homeostasis and mitophagy was fully reversed by concomitant Parkin deficiency. Thus, our results implicate a role for TRAF6 in the cross-regulation of both ubiquitin- and receptor- mediated mitophagy through the restriction of Parkin. Together, we illustrate that β-cells engage innate immune signaling to adaptively respond to a diabetogenic environment.