Replication confers β cell immaturity

Sapna Puri(University of California, San Francisco), Nilotpal Roy(University of California, San Francisco), Holger A. Russ(University of California, San Francisco), Laura Leonhardt(University of California, San Francisco), Esra Karslioglu French(University of Pittsburgh), Ritu Roy(University of California, San Francisco), Henrik Bengtsson(University of California, San Francisco), Donald K. Scott(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Andrew F. Stewart(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Matthias Hebrok(University of California, San Francisco)
Nature Communications
January 29, 2018
Cited by 157Open Access
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Abstract

Pancreatic β cells are highly specialized to regulate systemic glucose levels by secreting insulin. In adults, increase in β-cell mass is limited due to brakes on cell replication. In contrast, proliferation is robust in neonatal β cells that are functionally immature as defined by a lower set point for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Here we show that β-cell proliferation and immaturity are linked by tuning expression of physiologically relevant, non-oncogenic levels of c-Myc. Adult β cells induced to replicate adopt gene expression and metabolic profiles resembling those of immature neonatal β that proliferate readily. We directly demonstrate that priming insulin-producing cells to enter the cell cycle promotes a functionally immature phenotype. We suggest that there exists a balance between mature functionality and the ability to expand, as the phenotypic state of the β cell reverts to a less functional one in response to proliferative cues.


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