4.7 Article

Survey of the Human Pancreatic β-Cell G1/S Proteome Reveals a Potential Therapeutic Role for Cdk-6 and Cyclin D1 in Enhancing Human β-Cell Replication and Function In Vivo

Journal

DIABETES
Volume 58, Issue 4, Pages 882-893

Publisher

AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db08-0631

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R-01 DK5502, T-32 DK07052]
  2. American Diabetes Association [1-06-134]
  3. Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) [1-2008-39]

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OBJECTIVES-To comprehensively inventory the proteins that control the G1/S cell cycle checkpoint in the human islet and compare them with those in the murine islet, to determine whether these might therapeutically enhance human beta-cell replication, to determine whether human beta-cell replication can be demonstrated in an in vivo model, and to enhance human beta-cell function in vivo. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS-Thirty-four G1/S regulatory proteins were examined in human islets. Effects of adenoviruses expressing cdk-6, cdk-4, and cyclin D-1 on proliferation in human beta-cells were studied in both invitro, and in vivo models. RESULTS-Multiple differences between murine and human islets occur, most strikingly the presence of cdk-6 in human beta-cells versus its low abundance in the murine islet. Cdk-6 and cyclin D-1 in vitro led to marked activation of retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation and cell cycle progression with no induction of cell death. Human islets transduced with cdk-6 and cyclin D-1 were transplanted into diabetic NOD-SCID mice and markedly outperformed native human islets in vivo, maintaining glucose control for the entire 6 weeks of the study. CONCLUSIONS-The human G1/S proteome is described for the first time. Human islets are unlike their rodent counterparts in that they contain easily measurable cdk-6. Cdk-6 overexpression, alone or in combination with cyclin D-1, strikingly stimulates human beta-cell replication, both in vitro as well as in vivo, without inducing cell death or loss of function. Using this model, human beta-cell replication can be induced and studied in vivo. Diabetes 58:882-893, 2009

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