In vivo imaging of β-cell function reveals glucose-mediated heterogeneity of β-cell functional development.
Jia ZhaoWeijian ZongYiwen ZhaoDongzhou GouShenghui LiangJiayu ShenYi WuXuan ZhengRunlong WuXu WangFuzeng NiuAimin WangYunfeng ZhangJing-Wei XiongLiangyi ChenYanmei LiuPublished in: eLife (2019)
How pancreatic β-cells acquire function in vivo is a long-standing mystery due to the lack of technology to visualize β-cell function in living animals. Here, we applied a high-resolution two-photon light-sheet microscope for the first in vivo imaging of Ca2+activity of every β-cell in Tg (ins:Rcamp1.07) zebrafish. We reveal that the heterogeneity of β-cell functional development in vivo occurred as two waves propagating from the islet mantle to the core, coordinated by islet vascularization. Increasing amounts of glucose induced functional acquisition and enhancement of β-cells via activating calcineurin/nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT) signaling. Conserved in mammalians, calcineurin/NFAT prompted high-glucose-stimulated insulin secretion of neonatal mouse islets cultured in vitro. However, the reduction in low-glucose-stimulated insulin secretion was dependent on optimal glucose but independent of calcineurin/NFAT. Thus, combination of optimal glucose and calcineurin activation represents a previously unexplored strategy for promoting functional maturation of stem cell-derived β-like cells in vitro.
Keyphrases
- nuclear factor
- single cell
- high resolution
- high glucose
- blood glucose
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- cell therapy
- toll like receptor
- metabolic syndrome
- blood pressure
- immune response
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- dna methylation
- bone marrow
- photodynamic therapy
- cell death
- mesenchymal stem cells
- weight loss
- fluorescence imaging