Haploinsufficiency of Insm1 Impairs Postnatal Baseline β-Cell Mass.
Weihua TaoYao ZhangLijuan MaChujun DengHualin DuanXuehua LiangRui LiaoShaoqiang LinTao NieWanqun ChenCunchuan WangCarmen BirchmeierShiqi JiaPublished in: Diabetes (2018)
Baseline β-cell mass is established during the early postnatal period when β-cells expand. In this study, we show that heterozygous ablation of Insm1 decreases baseline β-cell mass and subsequently impairs glucose tolerance. When exposed to a high-fat diet or on an ob/ob background, glucose intolerance was more severe in Insm1+/lacZ mice compared with Insm1+/+ mice, although no further decrease in the β-cell mass was detected. In islets of early postnatal Insm1+/lacZ mice, the cell cycle was prolonged in β-cells due to downregulation of the cell cycle gene Ccnd1 Although Insm1 had a low affinity for the Ccnd1 promoter compared with other binding sites, binding affinity was strongly dependent on Insm1 levels. We observed dramatically decreased binding of Insm1 to the Ccnd1 promoter after downregulation of Insm1 expression. Furthermore, downregulation of Ccnd1 resulted in a prolonged cell cycle, and overexpression of Ccnd1 rescued cell cycle abnormalities observed in Insm1-deficient β-cells. We conclude that decreases in Insm1 interfere with β-cell specification during the early postnatal period and impair glucose homeostasis during metabolic stress in adults. Insm1 levels are therefore a factor that can influence the development of diabetes.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle
- cell proliferation
- single cell
- induced apoptosis
- high fat diet
- cell therapy
- preterm infants
- signaling pathway
- cell cycle arrest
- dna methylation
- cardiovascular disease
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- poor prognosis
- adipose tissue
- early onset
- wild type
- mass spectrometry
- long non coding rna
- binding protein
- dna binding
- radiofrequency ablation
- stress induced
- genome wide analysis