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Publication : Inactivating the permanent neonatal diabetes gene Mnx1 switches insulin-producing β-cells to a δ-like fate and reveals a facultative proliferative capacity in aged β-cells.

First Author  Pan FC Year  2015
Journal  Development Volume  142
Issue  21 Pages  3637-48
PubMed ID  26534984 Mgi Jnum  J:239946
Mgi Id  MGI:5882050 Doi  10.1242/dev.126011
Citation  Pan FC, et al. (2015) Inactivating the permanent neonatal diabetes gene Mnx1 switches insulin-producing beta-cells to a delta-like fate and reveals a facultative proliferative capacity in aged beta-cells. Development 142(21):3637-48
abstractText  Homozygous Mnx1 mutation causes permanent neonatal diabetes in humans, but via unknown mechanisms. Our systematic and longitudinal analysis of Mnx1 function during murine pancreas organogenesis and into the adult uncovered novel stage-specific roles for Mnx1 in endocrine lineage allocation and beta-cell fate maintenance. Inactivation in the endocrine-progenitor stage shows that Mnx1 promotes beta-cell while suppressing delta-cell differentiation programs, and is crucial for postnatal beta-cell fate maintenance. Inactivating Mnx1 in embryonic beta-cells (Mnx1(Deltabeta)) caused beta-to-delta-like cell transdifferentiation, which was delayed until postnatal stages. In the latter context, beta-cells escaping Mnx1 inactivation unexpectedly upregulated Mnx1 expression and underwent an age-independent persistent proliferation. Escaper beta-cells restored, but then eventually surpassed, the normal pancreatic beta-cell mass, leading to islet hyperplasia in aged mice. In vitro analysis of islets isolated from Mnx1(Deltabeta) mice showed higher insulin secretory activity and greater insulin mRNA content than in wild-type islets. Mnx1(Deltabeta) mice also showed a much faster return to euglycemia after beta-cell ablation, suggesting that the new beta-cells derived from the escaper population are functional. Our findings identify Mnx1 as an important factor in beta-cell differentiation and proliferation, with the potential for targeting to increase the number of endogenous beta-cells for diabetes therapy.
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