| Literature DB >> 22618775 |
Marta Szabat1, Francis C Lynn, Brad G Hoffman, Timothy J Kieffer, Douglas W Allan, James D Johnson.
Abstract
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22618775 PMCID: PMC3357305 DOI: 10.2337/db11-1361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
FIG. 1.Maturation during the life span of single adult β-cells. We present three theoretical possibilities for how maturation kinetics of newly formed β-cells might relate to adult β-cell proliferation events. Here, immature β-cells are drawn with lighter nuclei (denoting reduced expression of key maturity genes, such as insulin) and fewer granules (denoting functional immaturity), but this concept can be potentially extended to any feature of a functionally mature β-cell. The horizontal axis is time. A: Possibility 1: Symmetrical division and maturation of mature adult β-cells. B: Possibility 2: Asymmetrical division and maturation of mature adult β-cells. C: Possibility 3: Symmetrical division and maturation of immature adult β-cells. The last possibility includes scenarios in which cells might dedifferentiate before proliferating. It is also clear from this illustration that the ratio of mature to immature β-cells would depend on the relative contribution of these modes.
FIG. 2.Maintenance of functional maturity in adult β-cells: active or passive control? Two alternate, but not mutually exclusive, theories on the maintenance of differentiated phenotypes in long-liver cells like pancreatic β-cells are shown. A:Possibility 1: Key transcription factors are transiently activated and lock the cell into a mature state. B: Possibility 2: Key transcription factors are required constantly at some level to maintain differentiation. In this mode, the differentiation state of the cell is more malleable and subject to modulation by intrinsic, including reductions in key transcription factors, and extrinsic factors.