| Literature DB >> 16822955 |
Günter Päth1, Anne Opel, Martin Gehlen, Veit Rothhammer, Xinjie Niu, Catarina Limbert, Lars Romfeld, Sigrun Hügl, Anita Knoll, Mathias D Brendel, Reinhard G Bretzel, Jochen Seufert.
Abstract
p8 protein expression is known to be upregulated in the exocrine pancreas during acute pancreatitis. Own previous work revealed glucose-dependent p8 expression also in endocrine pancreatic beta-cells. Here we demonstrate that glucose-induced INS-1 beta-cell expansion is preceded by p8 protein expression. Moreover, isopropylthiogalactoside (IPTG)-induced p8 overexpression in INS-1 beta-cells (p8-INS-1) enhances cell proliferation and expansion in the presence of glucose only. Although beta-cell-related gene expression (PDX-1, proinsulin I, GLUT2, glucokinase, amylin) and function (insulin content and secretion) are slightly reduced during p8 overexpression, removal of IPTG reverses beta-cell function within 24 h to normal levels. In addition, insulin secretion of p8-INS-1 beta-cells in response to 0-25 mM glucose is not altered by preceding p8-induced beta-cell expansion. Adenovirally transduced p8 overexpression in primary human pancreatic islets increases proliferation, expansion, and cumulative insulin secretion in vitro. Transplantation of mock-transduced control islets under the kidney capsule of immunosuppressed streptozotocin-diabetic mice reduces blood glucose and increases human C-peptide serum concentrations to stable levels after 3 days. In contrast, transplantation of equal numbers of p8-transduced islets results in a continuous decrease of blood glucose and increase of human C-peptide beyond 3 days, indicating p8-induced expansion of transplanted human beta-cells in vivo. This is underlined by a doubling of insulin content in kidneys containing p8-transduced islet grafts explanted on day 9. These results establish p8 as a novel molecular mediator of glucose-induced pancreatic beta-cell expansion in vitro and in vivo and support the notion of existing beta-cell replication in the adult organism.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16822955 DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00436.2005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab ISSN: 0193-1849 Impact factor: 4.310