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Targeted pharmacological therapy restores β-cell function for diabetes remission.

Stephan SachsAimée Bastidas-PonceSophie TritschlerMostafa BakhtiAnika BöttcherMiguel A Sánchez-GarridoMarta Tarquis-MedinaMaximilian KleinertKatrin FischerSigrid JallAlexandra HargerErik BaderSara RoscioniSiegfried UssarAnnette FeuchtingerBurcak YesildagAparna NeelakandhanChristine B JensenMarion CornuBin YangBrian FinanRichard D DiMarchiMatthias H TschöpFabian Joachim TheisSusanna M HofmannTimo Dirk MüllerHeiko Lickert
Published in: Nature metabolism (2020)
Dedifferentiation of insulin-secreting β cells in the islets of Langerhans has been proposed to be a major mechanism of β-cell dysfunction. Whether dedifferentiated β cells can be targeted by pharmacological intervention for diabetes remission, and ways in which this could be accomplished, are unknown as yet. Here we report the use of streptozotocin-induced diabetes to study β-cell dedifferentiation in mice. Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) of islets identified markers and pathways associated with β-cell dedifferentiation and dysfunction. Single and combinatorial pharmacology further show that insulin treatment triggers insulin receptor pathway activation in β cells and restores maturation and function for diabetes remission. Additional β-cell selective delivery of oestrogen by Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1-oestrogen conjugate) decreases daily insulin requirements by 60%, triggers oestrogen-specific activation of the endoplasmic-reticulum-associated protein degradation system, and further increases β-cell survival and regeneration. GLP-1-oestrogen also protects human β cells against cytokine-induced dysfunction. This study not only describes mechanisms of β-cell dedifferentiation and regeneration, but also reveals pharmacological entry points to target dedifferentiated β cells for diabetes remission.
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