Zinc accumulation-induced integrated stress response triggers β-cell identity loss

Qing Ma(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Wenjun Xu(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Xuan Wang(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Haoyu Nie(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Yukun Gao(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Rui Hu(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Zhihao Yang(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Xushu Wang(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Na Ta(Second Military Medical University), X. Chen(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Zhaoyue Wang(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Minglu Xu(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Li Shao(Shanghai East Hospital), Meng Guo(Second Military Medical University), Yanfang Liu(Second Military Medical University), R. Le(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Shaorong Gao(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital), Weida Li(Shanghai First Maternity and Infant Hospital)
Cell Research
January 28, 2026
Cited by 1Open Access
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Abstract

Pancreatic β-cell identity loss is increasingly recognized as a critical pathogenic contributor to β-cell failure in type 2 diabetes (T2D), but the specific mechanism remains to be characterized. In this study, we demonstrate that zinc accumulation contributes to β-cell identity loss during diabetes progression in both human and mouse islets. Using a model of human embryonic stem cell-derived islets (SC-islets), we reveal that accumulated zinc triggers the integrated stress response (ISR), with elevated ATF4 expression in SC-β cells. This, in turn, initiates expression of the α cell-specific transcription factor ARX, resulting in the conversion of β cells to α cells, thus forming a zinc-ATF4-ARX regulatory axis. Like primary β cells, SC-β cells also undergo identity loss after transplantation into diabetic animals, which can be prevented by an ISR inhibitor, resulting in improved glycemic control. Furthermore, both genetic depletion and chemical inhibition of zinc accumulation effectively safeguard SC-β cells from identity loss and enhance their efficacy in diabetic animals. Our study thus reveals a pathogenic mechanism in which zinc accumulation induces β-cell identity loss through lineage-tracing approaches and proposes a protective strategy to counteract this process.


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