| Literature DB >> 29185012 |
Michele Solimena1,2,3, Anke M Schulte4, Lorella Marselli5, Florian Ehehalt6,7,8, Daniela Richter6,7, Manuela Kleeberg6,7,8, Hassan Mziaut6,7, Klaus-Peter Knoch6,7, Julia Parnis9, Marco Bugliani5, Afshan Siddiq10,11, Anne Jörns12, Frédéric Burdet13, Robin Liechti13, Mara Suleiman5, Daniel Margerie14, Farooq Syed5, Marius Distler8, Robert Grützmann15, Enrico Petretto16,17, Aida Moreno-Moral16,17, Carolin Wegbrod6,7, Anke Sönmez6,7, Katja Pfriem6,7, Anne Friedrich6,7, Jörn Meinel18, Claes B Wollheim19, Gustavo B Baretton18, Raphael Scharfmann20, Everson Nogoceke21, Ezio Bonifacio6,7,22, Dorothée Sturm6,7,8, Birgit Meyer-Puttlitz14, Ugo Boggi5, Hans-Detlev Saeger6,7,8, Franco Filipponi5, Mathias Lesche23, Paolo Meda19, Andreas Dahl23, Leonore Wigger13, Ioannis Xenarios13, Mario Falchi11, Bernard Thorens24, Jürgen Weitz6,7,8, Krister Bokvist25, Sigurd Lenzen12, Guy A Rutter9, Philippe Froguel11,26,27,28, Manon von Bülow14, Mark Ibberson29, Piero Marchetti30.
Abstract
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Pancreatic islet beta cell failure causes type 2 diabetes in humans. To identify transcriptomic changes in type 2 diabetic islets, the Innovative Medicines Initiative for Diabetes: Improving beta-cell function and identification of diagnostic biomarkers for treatment monitoring in Diabetes (IMIDIA) consortium ( www.imidia.org ) established a comprehensive, unique multicentre biobank of human islets and pancreas tissues from organ donors and metabolically phenotyped pancreatectomised patients (PPP).Entities:
Keywords: Beta cell; Biobank; Diabetes; Gene expression; Insulin secretion; Islet; Laser capture microdissection; Organ donor; Pancreatectomy; Systems biology
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29185012 PMCID: PMC5803296 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-017-4500-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Fig. 1Transcriptional profiling of islet samples using complementary isolation techniques. (a) Overview of our approach. Islets from OD and PPP were analysed by Affymetrix profiling to identify differentially expressed (DE) genes. These data were combined with clinical and functional data to identify gene co-expression modules correlated with T2D-related traits. ‘Collag.’ refers to enzymatic digestion. ‘Common DE genes’ refers to genes differentially regulated in T2D vs ND in both OD and PPP islets. ‘Pathways/Upstream regulators’ refers to pathways downstream of and regulatory genes upstream of gene co-expression modules. (b, c). Principal component analysis of OD and PPP islets isolated enzymatically or by LCM using all transcribed genes. Principal component 1 (PC1) accounts for 49% of the total variance; PC2 accounts for 4%. (b) LCM islet samples (green, PPP; orange, OD) cluster separately from enzymatically isolated islet samples (orange, OD; grey, PPP) regardless of patient origin. (c) Duplicate OD (orange) and PPP (purple) samples isolated either enzymatically or by LCM are highlighted, confirming that clustering is according to the isolation method. DP, code for Dresden pancreatectomised patient samples; ND, non-diabetic; PO, code for Pisa OD samples; T2D, type 2 diabetic
Clinical characteristics of the OD and PPP cohorts included in this study
| OD cohort ( | PPP cohort (n=103) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | ND, | T2D, | ND, | T2D, | IGT, | T3cD, |
| Sex (female/male) | 46/38 | 6/13 | 16/16 | 13/23 | 6/9 | 6/14 |
| Age (years) | 60±16 | 72±7** | 60±14 | 66±12 | 63±13 | 66±9 |
| BMI (kg/m²) | 25.8±4.2 ( | 26.5±3.6 | 24.9±3.4 | 25.8±5.0 | 25.7±3.5 | 26.0±3.9 |
| Diabetes duration (years) | – | 9.9±7.4 ( | – | 10.6±8.6 | – | 0.02±0.1 |
| Blood glucose in ICU (mmol/l) | 8.0±1.8 ( | 11.7±4.3** | – | – | – | – |
| Fasting glucose (mmol/l) | – | – | 5.3±0.6 ( | 8.0±2.7*** ( | 5.3±0.4 | 6.7±1.7** |
| HbA1c (mmol/mol) | – | – | 38±6.6 ( | 58±15.3*** ( | 40±3.3 | 46±9.8** |
| HbA1c (%) | – | – | 5.6±0.6 ( | 7.5±1.4*** ( | 5.8±0.3 | 6.4±0.9** |
| Blood glucose at 2 h in the OGTT (mmol/l) | – | – | 6.1±1.3 ( | – | 9.2±0.8*** | 12.0±1.4*** ( |
| Histopathology | – | – | ||||
| Chronic pancreatitis | – | – | 6 (18.7%) | 7 (19.4%) | 2 (13.3%) | 4 (20.0%) |
| Benign tumour | – | – | 8 (25.0%) | 6 (16.7%) | 5 (33.3%) | 1 (5.0%) |
| Malign tumour | – | – | 18 (56.3%) | 23 (63.9%) | 8 (53.3%) | 15 (75.0%) |
Except for sex, the values are means ± SD
T2D patients were treated as follows: 16 OD and 13 PPP with oral glucose-lowering agents, 1 OD and 17 PPP with insulin, 1 OD and 4 PPP with oral glucose-lowering agents and insulin, 1 PPP with oral glucose-lowering agents, insulin and liraglutide, and 1 OD and 1 PPP with diet only. The tumour was located in the pancreas head in 13/15 T3cD PPP with an adenocarcinoma, and in the pancreas tail in the other patients. One PPP had a serous microcystic adenoma in the pancreas body
ICU, intense care unit; ND, non-diabetic individual; T2D, type 2 diabetic individual; T3cD, type 3c diabetic individual
**p < 0.01 and ***p < 0.001) vs ND, two-tailed t test
Fig. 2Transcriptomic analyses revealed a common gene signature in type 2 diabetic islets of OD and PPP. (a) Venn diagram showing the number of differentially expressed (DE) genes in T2D OD and PPP islets and in ND OD and PPP islets. The numbers include genes mapping to more than one probe set. Twenty-three differentially expressed genes overlapped between the two datasets (p = 9.1 × 10−12; hypergeometric test assuming a background of 15,165 expressed genes). Heatmaps indicate the number of upregulated (red) and downregulated (blue) genes in OD and PPP islets. (b–f). Box plots for the expression changes of five of the 19 differentially expressed genes that were dysregulated in the same direction in T2D compared to ND in OD and PPP islets. Circles represent outliers. (g) Fold changes in the expression of the 19 commonly dysregulated genes in T2D in islets from IGT PPP (black bars), T3cD PPP (grey bars) and T2D PPP (white bars) vs expression in ND PPP islets. See ESM Tables 7 and 8 for more details. ND, non-diabetic; T2D, type 2 diabetic; T3cD, type 3c diabetic
Genes showing differential regulation in T2D OD and PPP islets (adjusted p ≤ 0.05, absolute fold change ≤1.5)
| Islet OD | LCM islets PPP | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Entrez ID | Symbol | Gene name | Probe ID | Ratio | Adj. | Probe ID | Ratio | Adj. |
| 1 | 51239/200539 |
| Ankyrin repeat domain 23/39 | 229052_at | 0.585 | 1.14 × 10−2 | 1553366_s_at | 0.600 | 1.80 × 10−3 |
| 2 | 384 |
| Arginase 2 | 203946_s_at | 0.605 | 3.28 × 10−4 | 203946_s_at | 0.463 | 1.47 × 10−9 |
| 3 | 430 |
| Achaete-scute complex homologue 2 | 229215_at | 0.540 | 2.52 × 10−3 | 229215_at | 0.463 | 1.74 × 10−8 |
| 4 | 92291 |
| Calpain 13 | 229499_at | 0.535 | 2.52 × 10−3 | 229499_at | 0.614 | 4.66 × 10−3 |
| 5 | 10752 |
| Cell adhesion molecule with homology to L1CAM | 204591_at | 0.411 | 1.61 × 10−3 | 204591_at | 0.446 | 1.56 × 10−5 |
| 6 | 338557 |
| Free fatty acid receptor 4 | 240856_at | 0.604 | 1.10 × 10−2 | 240856_at | 0.566 | 1.79 × 10−3 |
| 7 | 57818 |
| Glucose-6-phosphatase, catalytic, 2 | 221453_at | 0.616 | 3.43 × 10−2 | 221453_at | 0.643 | 2.77 × 10−2 |
| 8 | 57467 |
| Hedgehog acyltransferase-like | 223572_at | 0.388 | 1.09 × 10−4 | 223572_at | 0.415 | 4.44 × 10−4 |
| 9 | 27065 |
| Neuron specific gene family member 1 | 209569_x_at | 0.624 | 2.41 × 10−2 | 209569_x_at | 0.610 | 8.59 × 10−4 |
| 10 | 64881 |
| Protocadherin 20 | 232054_at | 0.628 | 2.98 × 10−2 | 232054_at | 0.612 | 4.02 × 10−2 |
| 11 | 5502 |
| Protein phosphatase 1, regulatory subunit 1A | 235129_at | 0.419 | 3.07 × 10−4 | 235129_at | 0.475 | 5.54 × 10−6 |
| 12 | 6344 |
| Secretin receptor | 1565737_at | 0.531 | 4.68 × 10−4 | 1565737_at | 0.495 | 8.30 × 10−4 |
| 13 | 6514 |
| Solute carrier family 2, member 2 | 206535_at | 0.273 | 1.65 × 10−4 | 206535_at | 0.362 | 1.74 × 10−8 |
| 14 | 140738 |
| Transmembrane protein 37 | 1554485_s_at | 0.654 | 3.90 × 10−3 | 227190_at | 0.504 | 3.84 × 10−9 |
| 15 | 137970 |
| Unc-5 homologue D | 231325_at | 0.535 | 1.29 × 10−2 | 231325_at | 0.589 | 1.20 × 10−2 |
| 16 | 960 |
| CD44 molecule | 217523_at | 1.561 | 2.30 × 10−2 | 1557905_s_at | 1.681 | 1.84 × 10−2 |
| 17 | 284611 |
| Family with sequence similarity 102, member B | 226568_at | 1.538 | 9.05 × 10−3 | 226568_at | 1.636 | 2.15 × 10−2 |
| 18 | 114907 |
| F-box protein 32 | 232729_at | 1.716 | 1.51 × 10−3 | 225328_at | 1.505 | 7.66 × 10−3 |
| 19 | 131096 |
| Potassium voltage-gated channel, subfamily H, member 8 | 1552742_at | 1.529 | 1.09 × 10−2 | 1552742_at | 1.644 | 1.74 × 10−2 |
| 20 | 1600 |
| Dab, reelin signal transducer, homologue 1 ( | 228329_at | 0.616 | 3.90 × 10−2 | 228329_at | 1.551 | 4.59 × 10−2 |
| 21 | 2596 |
| Growth associated protein 43 | 204471_at | 0.611 | 1.94 × 10−2 | 204471_at | 1.880 | 2.33 × 10−2 |
| 22 | 5166 |
| Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase, isozyme 4 | 1562321_at | 0.537 | 8.37 × 10−3 | 1562321_at | 2.120 | 4.06 × 10−2 |
| 23 | 6004 |
| Regulator of G protein signalling 16 | 209324_s_at | 0.663 | 2.23 × 10−2 | 209324_s_at | 1.687 | 3.80 × 10−2 |
See ESM Tables 7, 8 and 13 for more details
Genes 1–15 are downregulated in OD and PPP; genes 16–19 are upregulated in OD and PPP; and genes 20–23 are downregulated in OD and upregulated in PPP
Probe ID, probe set ID; Adj. p, p value adjusted for multiple hypothesis tests using the Benjamini–Hochberg method; T2D, type 2 diabetes
Fig. 3Functional validation of the dysregulated genes ARG2, PPP1R1A and TMEM37 in insulin-producing cells. (a) Confocal microscopy of human pancreas tissue sections co-immunostained for insulin and ARG2, PPP1R1A or TMEM37. (b-d) RT-qPCR analysis of ARG2, PPP1R1A and TMEM37 expression levels in human islet alpha and beta cell-enriched fractions from ND (n = 5, black columns) and T2D (n = 4, white columns) OD (*p < 0.05, beta vs alpha cells; † p < 0.05 T2D vs ND beta cells, Student’s t test). (e-g) Insulin stimulation index (ISI) of INS-1 832/13 cells after silencing of Arg2 (e), Ppp1r1a (f) or Tmem37 (g) expression with small interfering RNA (siRNA) (grey columns) vs cells treated with a control (Ctrl siRNA, black columns) siRNA oligonucleotide (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, Student’s t test). (h) Ca2+ concentrations in INS-1 832/13 cells after silencing of Tmem37 (grey trace) vs cells treated with a control (Ctrl siRNA) siRNA oligonucleotide (black trace). The curves show the mean ± SEM Fura-2 AM ratios for 11 (n = 351 siGLO+, Ctrl siRNA-treated cells) and 12 (n = 480 siGLO+, Tmem37 siRNA-treated cells) coverslips. Changes in glucose and KCl concentrations are indicated. The inset shows the mean ± SEM cumulative Ca2+ changes (AUC) in response to glucose (**p < 0.01 vs Ctrl, Mann–Whitney U test). (i) ISI of INS-1 832/13 cells transfected with Tmem37-V5 or the empty pcDNA3.1 vector (Ctrl) (*p < 0.05, Student’s t test) (j) Ca2+ concentrations in eGFP+ INS-1 832/13 cells co-transfected with Tmem37-V5 (grey trace) and eGFP+ INS-1 832/13 cells co-transfected with the empty pcDNA3.1 vector (Ctrl) (black trace). The curves show the mean ± SEM Fura Red ratios (R) for ten (n = 332 eGFP+, Tmem37-V5 co-transfected cells) and 12 (n = 419 eGFP+, pcDNA3.1 co-transfected cells) coverslips. The glucose concentration was increased from 3 to 15 mmol/l, and 20 mmol/l KCl was added at the indicated times. The inset shows mean + SEM of the peak R amplitude in response to high glucose and KCl stimulation (*p < 0.05, unpaired two-tailed t test). ND, non-diabetic; T2D, type 2 diabetic
Fig. 4Genes regulated in type 2 diabetic OD and PPP islets are enriched for beta cell function-related pathways. The significance of pathway enrichment is shown as the –log10(enrichment p value) for significantly differentially expressed genes (Limma empirical Bayes adjusted p ≤ 0.05, absolute fold change ≤1.5 for OD and ≤1.2 for PPP) in OD (a) and PPP (b) islets. Black bars represent regulated pathways in common between OD and PPP type 2 diabetic islets. AMPK, 5´ AMP-activated protein kinase; CCR5, C-C motif chemokine receptor 5; CREB, cAMP responsive element binding protein; FXR, farnesoid X receptor; GABA, γ-aminobutyric acid; GPCR, G protein-coupled receptor; HER2, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2; p70S6K, p70 ribosomal protein S6 kinase; PPARα, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α; RhoGDI, rho GDP dissociation inhibitor; RXRα, retinoid X receptor α. See ESM Tables 10–12 for more details
Fig. 5Systems biology analysis predicted the key transcription factors (TFs) regulated in type 2 diabetes. (a) Workflow to identify upstream TFs. (b) Schematic showing how literature and sequence-based networks were combined to generate an intersection network. TFs are represented by inverted triangles and genes are represented by squares. Evidence for TF gene targets is shown by arrows (literature red, sequence-based green). Intersection Network (orange) shows TF–target gene interactions present in both literature and sequence-based networks. Underneath each schematic is a hive plot showing edges between upstream TFs, target genes and gene co-expression modules. Modules are shown as coloured nodes on the vertical axes. TFs are represented on the left axes and their predicted target genes on the right axes. Edges are coloured according to the gene co-expression module of the source node. Nodes are ordered along the axes by increasing degree from the centre outwards. (c) Network representation of the Intersection Network shown in (b). Gene co-expression modules are represented as large coloured nodes in the corresponding module colour. skyblue, blue and darkviolet modules are correlated with the insulin stimulation index (ISI) of OD islets (solid black outlines), while lightpink4 module correlates with glucose concentrations at 2 h after an OGTT in PPP islets (dashed box). Yellow nodes indicate potential upstream TFs for each module. Blue or orange nodes indicate putative target genes (TFs in orange). Network edges were predicted by both literature and sequence motif-based approaches. For visualisation, the network was filtered to remove all gene nodes except for TFs with only one edge. For a more detailed view, a PDF version of Fig. 5 is provided as ESM Fig. 11. (d, e) Volcano plots of differentially expressed TFs in type 2 diabetic vs non-diabetic OD (d) and PPP (e) islets. Significantly differentially regulated TFs (Limma empirical Bayes adjusted (Benjamini Hochberg method) p ≤ 0.05, fold change ≥1.2) are shown as red (upregulated) or blue (downregulated) circles, while potentially differentially regulated TFs with lower fold changes (FDR ≤0.05; no fold change cut-off) are shown as black circles. Upregulated and downregulated TFs are also indicated on the right of each plot. See ESM Table 13 for more details
Fig. 6Validation of PDX1, HNF1A and HLF as transcription factors (TFs) located upstream of the T2D islet signature genes. (a–c) RT-qPCR of PDX1 (a), HNF1A (b), and HLF (c) expression levels in alpha and beta cell-enriched fractions from human ND (n = 5, black bars) and T2D (n = 4, white bars) OD islets. *p < 0.05, Student’s t test. (d) Co-immunostaining for insulin (green) and PDX1 or HNF1A (red) in human EndoC-βH1 cells. Nuclei are counterstained with DAPI (blue). (e) Immunoblots for PDX1, HNF1A or γ-tubulin in EndoC-βH1 cells treated with esiRNA for PDX1, HNF1A or with a control esiRNA. Bar, 10 μm. (f) RT-qPCR of the 19 T2D islet signature genes in EndoC-βH1 cells treated with esiRNA for PDX1 or HNF1A or with a control esiRNA (*p < 0.05, † p < 0.01 and ‡ p < 0.001; ANOVA) (n = 4, except for ANKRD39, which was measured three times). (g) Fold enrichment (y-axis) of T2D islet signature genes with predicted binding sites for PDX1 as measured upon chromatin immunoprecipitation with anti-PDX1 antibody vs control IgG followed by RT-qPCR with primers flanking the predicted binding site. The values in (g) are from three independent chromatin immunoprecipitations. esiRNA, endoribonuclease-prepared small interfering RNA; ND, non-diabetic; T2D, type 2 diabetic