PUBLICATION
            An insulin signaling feedback loop regulates pancreas progenitor cell differentiation during islet development and regeneration
- Authors
 - Ye, L., Robertson, M.A., Mastracci, T.L., Anderson, R.M.
 - ID
 - ZDB-PUB-151216-14
 - Date
 - 2016
 - Source
 - Developmental Biology 409(2): 354-69 (Journal)
 - Registered Authors
 - Anderson, Ryan, Ye, Lihua
 - Keywords
 - Development, IRS2, Insulin, Pancreas, Pancreatic progenitor, Regeneration, Zebrafish, pdx1, β cell
 - MeSH Terms
 - 
    
        
        
            
                
- Receptor, Insulin/metabolism
 - Homeodomain Proteins/metabolism
 - Insulin-Secreting Cells/cytology
 - Cell Lineage
 - Blastomeres/cytology
 - Blastomeres/metabolism
 - Blastomeres/transplantation
 - Stem Cells/cytology*
 - Endoderm/cytology
 - Endoderm/embryology
 - Endoderm/metabolism
 - Feedback, Physiological*
 - Cell Differentiation*
 - Insulin/metabolism*
 - Zebrafish/embryology
 - Signal Transduction*
 - Trans-Activators/metabolism
 - Gene Knockdown Techniques
 - Animals
 - Regeneration*
 - Islets of Langerhans/cytology
 - Islets of Langerhans/embryology*
 
 - PubMed
 - 26658317 Full text @ Dev. Biol.
 
            Citation
        
        
            Ye, L., Robertson, M.A., Mastracci, T.L., Anderson, R.M. (2016) An insulin signaling feedback loop regulates pancreas progenitor cell differentiation during islet development and regeneration. Developmental Biology. 409(2):354-69.
        
    
                
                    
                        Abstract
                    
                    
                
                
            
        
        
    
        
            
            
 
    
    
        
    
    
    
        
                As one of the key nutrient sensors, insulin signaling plays an important role in integrating environmental energy cues with organism growth. In adult organisms, relative insufficiency of insulin signaling induces compensatory expansion of insulin-secreting pancreatic beta (β) cells. However, little is known about how insulin signaling feedback might influence neogenesis of β cells during embryonic development. Using genetic approaches and a unique cell transplantation system in developing zebrafish, we have uncovered a novel role for insulin signaling in the negative regulation of pancreatic progenitor cell differentiation. Blocking insulin signaling in the pancreatic progenitors hastened the expression of the essential β cell genes insulin and pdx1, and promoted β cell fate at the expense of alpha cell fate. In addition, loss of insulin signaling promoted β cell regeneration and destabilization of alpha cell character. These data indicate that insulin signaling constitutes a tunable mechanism for β cell compensatory plasticity during early development. Moreover, using a novel blastomere-to-larva transplantation strategy, we found that loss of insulin signaling in endoderm-committed blastomeres drove their differentiation into β cells. Furthermore, the extent of this differentiation was dependent on the function of the β cell mass in the host. Altogether, our results indicate that modulation of insulin signaling will be crucial for the development of β cell restoration therapies for diabetics; further clarification of the mechanisms of insulin signaling in β cell progenitors will reveal therapeutic targets for both in vivo and in vitro β cell generation.
            
    
        
        
    
    
    
                
                    
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