期刊
DEVELOPMENT
卷 144, 期 13, 页码 2402-2414出版社
COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.146316
关键词
Islet; Pancreas; Mtor; Postnatal; Diabetes; Mouse
资金
- National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01DK092456, U19 AI116491]
- Cincinnati Digestive Disease Center Award (NIH) [P30 DK0789392]
While much is known about the molecular pathways that regulate embryonic development and adult homeostasis of the endocrine pancreas, little is known about what regulates early postnatal development and maturation of islets. Given that birth marks the first exposure to enteral nutrition, we investigated how nutrient-regulated signaling pathways influence postnatal islet development in mice. We performed loss-of-function studies of mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR), a highly conserved kinase within a nutrient-sensing pathway known to regulate cellular growth, morphogenesis and metabolism. Deletion of Mtor in pancreatic endocrine cells had no significant effect on their embryonic development. However, within the first 2 weeks after birth, mTOR-deficient islets became dysmorphic, beta-cell maturation and function were impaired, and animals lost islet mass. Moreover, we discovered that these distinct functions of mTOR are mediated by separate downstream branches of the pathway, in that mTORC1 (with adaptor protein Raptor) is the main complex mediating the maturation and function of islets, whereas mTORC2 (with adaptor protein Rictor) impacts islet mass and architecture. Taken together, these findings suggest that nutrient sensing may be an essential trigger for postnatal beta-cell maturation and islet development.
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