| Literature DB >> 33121533 |
Idil I Aigha1,2, Essam M Abdelalim3,4.
Abstract
Understanding the biology underlying the mechanisms and pathways regulating pancreatic β cell development is necessary to understand the pathology of diabetes mellitus (DM), which is characterized by the progressive reduction in insulin-producing β cell mass. Pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) can potentially offer an unlimited supply of functional β cells for cellular therapy and disease modeling of DM. Homeobox protein NKX6.1 is a transcription factor (TF) that plays a critical role in pancreatic β cell function and proliferation. In human pancreatic islet, NKX6.1 expression is exclusive to β cells and is undetectable in other islet cells. Several reports showed that activation of NKX6.1 in PSC-derived pancreatic progenitors (MPCs), expressing PDX1 (PDX1+/NKX6.1+), warrants their future commitment to monohormonal β cells. However, further differentiation of MPCs lacking NKX6.1 expression (PDX1+/NKX6.1-) results in an undesirable generation of non-functional polyhormonal β cells. The importance of NKX6.1 as a crucial regulator in MPC specification into functional β cells directs attentions to further investigating its mechanism and enhancing NKX6.1 expression as a means to increase β cell function and mass. Here, we shed light on the role of NKX6.1 during pancreatic β cell development and in directing the MPCs to functional monohormonal lineage. Furthermore, we address the transcriptional mechanisms and targets of NKX6.1 as well as its association with diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: Cell therapy; Diabetes; Pancreatic progenitors; Pluripotent stem cells; Transcription factor; β cell mass
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33121533 PMCID: PMC7597038 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-020-01977-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Schematic representation showing the development of the pancreas from foregut endoderm into pancreatic islet. Tip and trunk domain formation and segregation during the primary transition. During the secondary transition, the formed trunk domain (green) gives rise to the endocrine progenitors and subsequently pancreatic islets, while the tip domain (purple) develops to the exocrine progenitors expressing PTF1A
Fig. 2The expression of key transcription factors (TFs) during different stages of multipotent pancreatic progenitor (MPC) differentiation into different lineages of pancreatic cells. NKX6.1 expression starts at the MPC stage, continues in the endocrine lineage, and becomes restricted to β cells
Fig. 3Schematic representation showing the function of NKX6.1 during early and late pancreatic development
Fig. 4Function of NKX6.1 in adult mouse pancreatic β cells. Nkx6.1 regulates the expression of genes encoding for proteins responsible for β cell proliferation (Ccnd2, Glut2, AURKA, c-Fos, Nr4a1, and Nr4a3), β cell development and function (MafA, Mnx1, Rfx6, and Tle3), glucose uptake and metabolism (Glut2, G6pc2, Pcx), and insulin biosynthesis (Ero1lb and Slc30a8)
Fig. 5Structural architecture and domain organization of NKX6.1. A schematic representation of NKX6.1, consists of N-terminal repression domain (N), a DNA-binding homeodomain, and a C-terminal activation domain (C). Crystal structure of Aristaless and Clawless homeodomains of drosophila in complex with the DNA (PDBID: 3A01). The two homeodomains (orange and cyan) cooperate in binding onto the DNA (gray). The drosophila homeodomain structure is the closest to NKX6.1 homeodomain
NKX6.1 expression and function during pancreas development in rodents and humans
| Developmental stage/specific role | NKX6.1 expression and function | |
|---|---|---|
| Rodents | Human | |
| Expression in the pancreatic epithelium | - At E9.5, Nkx6.1 starts to be expressed in the pancreatic epithelium [ | - At G6.5w, NKX6.1 is first detected in dorsal buds [ |
| - At E10.5, Nkx6.1 and Ptf1a are co-expressed in the majority of MPCs. | ||
| - At E12.5, Nkx6.1 becomes exclusively confined in the trunk cells [ | - At ~G7w, the NKX6.1 is co-localized with the early acinar marker, GATA4 in the MPCs giving rise to acinar cells [ | |
| - At ~G9w, NKX6.1 is detected in the tip cells before losing the expression a week later and becoming confined to the trunk area [ | ||
| Expression in endocrine cells | - At E13.5, the appearance of the first Ins+ cells co-expressing Nkx6.1 [ | - In adult islets, the NKX6.1 is exclusively expressed in β cells [ |
| - Ngn3 and Nkx6.1 co-expression at the endocrine progenitor stage is crucial for their commitment to β cell lineage [ | ||
| - hESC-derived β cells arise from NKX6.1+ endocrine progenitors co-expressing NGN3 [ | ||
| - Nkx6.1 is exclusively expressed in mature β cells [ | ||
| Expression in ductal cells | - Ductal cells mature from NKX6.1+ progenitors [ | - hESC-derived MPCs expressing NKX6.1+/SOX9++ represent ductal progenitors [ |
| Role in β cell maturation and function | - Nkx6.1 directly controls the expression of β cells and insulin processing genes ( | - In human islets, NKX6.1 overexpression does not improve on GSIS [ |
| - hPSC-derived MPCs co-expressing PDX1 and NKX6.1 differentiate into functional β cells in vitro and in vivo [ | ||
| - Nkx6.1 expression is required for GSIS [ | ||
| - hPSC-derived pancreatic progenitors lacking PDX1 (PDX1−/NKX6.1+) generate mature β cells [ | ||
| Role in β cell identity | - Nkx6.1 suppresses Ngn3 in adult β cells to their main identity and prevents their conversion into Sst-expressing δ cells [ | - NKX6.1 expression does not co-localize with SST, PP, or amylase during early or adult pancreas development [ |
| - Nkx6.1 suppresses Gcg expression by targeting PAX6 [ | ||
| - | ||
| Role in β cell proliferation | - Nkx6.1 controls the expression of Nr4a1, Nr4a3, and c-Fos, which are crucial for β cell proliferation [ | - In human islets, overexpression of NKX6.1 enhances β cell proliferation [ |
| - Nkx6.1 controls the expression of AURKA, which suppresses p53 [ | ||
| - Nkx6.1 controls the expression of Glut2 and Glp1r, which are crucial for β cell proliferation [ | ||
CS13 Carnegie stage 13 of embryology (~ 6.5 weeks of gestation), CS19 Carnegie stage 19 of embryology (~ 9 weeks of gestation), E9.5 embryonic day 9.5, G6.5W 6.5 weeks of gestation, G9W 9 weeks of gestation, GSIS glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, hESCs human embryonic stem cells, hiPSCs human induced pluripotent stem cells, MPCs multipotent progenitor cells, TF transcription factor