4.8 Article

Pancreatic β Cell Dedifferentiation in Diabetes and Redifferentiation following Insulin Therapy

Journal

CELL METABOLISM
Volume 19, Issue 5, Pages 872-882

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2014.03.010

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 DK098584, R01 DK69445]
  2. National Institutes of Health (Diabetes Research Training Center) [5P60 DK020579]

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Diabetes is characterized by glucotoxic'' loss of pancreatic beta cell function and insulin content, but underlying mechanisms remain unclear. A mouse model of insulin-secretory deficiency induced by beta cell inexcitability (K-ATP gain of function) demonstrates development of diabetes and reiterates the features of human neonatal diabetes. In the diabetic state, beta cells lose their mature identity and dedifferentiate to neurogenin3-positive and insulin-negative cells. Lineage-tracing experiments show that dedifferentiated cells can subsequently redifferentiate to mature neurogenin3-negative, insulin-positive beta cells after lowering of blood glucose by insulin therapy. We demonstrate here that beta cell dedifferentiation, rather than apoptosis, is the main mechanism of loss of insulin-positive cells, and redifferentiation accounts for restoration of insulin content and antidiabetic drug responsivity in these animals. These results may help explain gradual decrease in beta cell mass in long-standing diabetes and recovery of beta cell function and drug responsivity in type 2 diabetic patients following insulin therapy, and they suggest an approach to rescuing exhausted'' beta cells in diabetes.

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