An adult clock component links circadian rhythms to pancreatic β-cell maturation.
Ana P MontalvoZoe L GruskinAndrew LeducMai LiuZihan GaoJune H AhnJuerg R StraubhaarNikolai SlavovJuan R Alvarez-DominguezPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
How ubiquitous circadian clocks orchestrate tissue-specific outputs is not well understood. Pancreatic β cell-autonomous clocks attune insulin secretion to daily energy cycles, and desynchrony from genetic or behavioral disruptions raises type 2 diabetes risk. We show that the transcription factor DEC1, a clock component induced in adult β cells, coordinates their glucose responsiveness by synchronizing energy metabolism and secretory gene oscillations. Dec1 -ablated mice develop lifelong hypo-insulinemic diabetes, despite normal islet formation and intact circadian Clock and Bmal1 activators. DEC1, but not CLOCK/BMAL1, binds maturity-linked genes that mediate respiratory metabolism and insulin exocytosis, and Dec1 loss disrupts their transcription synchrony. Accordingly, β-cell Dec1 ablation causes hypo-insulinemia due to immature glucose responsiveness, dampening insulin rhythms. Thus, Dec1 links circadian clockwork to the β-cell maturation process, aligning metabolism to diurnal energy cycles.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- single cell
- transcription factor
- cell therapy
- glycemic control
- genome wide
- cardiovascular disease
- stem cells
- gene expression
- physical activity
- blood glucose
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- working memory
- genome wide identification
- skeletal muscle
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- dna methylation
- cell cycle arrest
- catheter ablation