Glucagon Receptor Antagonist-Stimulated α-Cell Proliferation Is Severely Restricted With Advanced Age.
Carol J LamMatthew M RankinKourtney B KingMelinda C WangBrian C ShookJake A KushnerPublished in: Diabetes (2019)
Glucagon-containing α-cells potently regulate glucose homeostasis, but the developmental biology of α-cells in adults remains poorly understood. Although glucagon receptor antagonists (GRAs) have great potential as antidiabetic therapies, murine and human studies have raised concerns that GRAs might cause uncontrolled α-cell growth. Surprisingly, previous rodent GRA studies were only performed in young mice, implying that the potential impact of GRAs to drive α-cell expansion in adult patients is unclear. We assessed adaptive α-cell turnover and adaptive proliferation, administering a novel GRA (JNJ-46207382) to both young and aged mice. Basal α-cell proliferation rapidly declined soon after birth and continued to drop to very low levels in aged mice. GRA drove a 2.4-fold increase in α-cell proliferation in young mice. In contrast, GRA-induced α-cell proliferation was severely reduced in aged mice, although still present at 3.2-fold the very low basal rate of aged controls. To interrogate the lineage of GRA-induced α-cells, we sequentially administered thymidine analogs and quantified their incorporation into α-cells. Similar to previous studies of β-cells, α-cells only divided once in both basal and stimulated conditions. Lack of contribution from highly proliferative "transit-amplifying" cells supports a model whereby α-cells expand by self-renewal and not via specialized progenitors.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- cell proliferation
- cell cycle arrest
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- stem cells
- pi k akt
- magnetic resonance imaging
- oxidative stress
- computed tomography
- endothelial cells
- blood pressure
- type diabetes
- palliative care
- pregnant women
- high fat diet induced
- metabolic syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- single cell
- postmenopausal women
- diabetic rats