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Reinforcing one-carbon metabolism via folic acid/Folr1 promotes β-cell differentiation.

Christos KarampeliasHabib RezanejadMandy RoskoLikun DuanJing LuLaura PazzagliPhilippe BertolinoCarolyn E CestaXiaojing LiuGregory S KorbuttOlov Andersson
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Diabetes can be caused by an insufficiency in β-cell mass. Here, we performed a genetic screen in a zebrafish model of β-cell loss to identify pathways promoting β-cell regeneration. We found that both folate receptor 1 (folr1) overexpression and treatment with folinic acid, stimulated β-cell differentiation in zebrafish. Treatment with folinic acid also stimulated β-cell differentiation in cultures of neonatal pig islets, showing that the effect could be translated to a mammalian system. In both zebrafish and neonatal pig islets, the increased β-cell differentiation originated from ductal cells. Mechanistically, comparative metabolomic analysis of zebrafish with/without β-cell ablation and with/without folinic acid treatment indicated β-cell regeneration could be attributed to changes in the pyrimidine, carnitine, and serine pathways. Overall, our results suggest evolutionarily conserved and previously unknown roles for folic acid and one-carbon metabolism in the generation of β-cells.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • stem cells
  • induced apoptosis
  • type diabetes
  • cardiovascular disease
  • cell cycle arrest
  • metabolic syndrome
  • genome wide
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • cell proliferation
  • skeletal muscle
  • signaling pathway