Product citations: 7

Powered by

Mapping histologic and functional maturation of human endocrine pancreas across early postnatal periods

Preprint on BioRxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology on 22 December 2024 by Saunders, D. C., Hart, N., et al.

ABSTRACT Human endocrine cell differentiation and islet morphogenesis play critical roles in determining islet cell mass and function, but the events and timeline of these processes are incompletely defined. To better understand early human islet cell development and maturation, we collected 115 pediatric pancreata and mapped morphological and spatiotemporal changes from birth through the first ten years of life. Using quantitative analyses and a combination of complementary tissue imaging approaches, including confocal microscopy and whole-slide imaging, we developed an integrated model for endocrine cell formation and islet architecture, including endocrine cell type heterogeneity and abundance, endocrine cell proliferation, and islet vascularization and innervation. We also assessed insulin and glucagon secretory profiles in isolated islet preparations from pediatric donors aged 2 months to 10 years and found a temporal difference in the maturation of insulin secretion compared to glucagon secretion. This comprehensive summary of postnatal and pediatric pancreatic islet development provides a framework for future studies and integration of emerging genetic and genomic data related to islet biology and diabetes risk.

Heterogeneous endocrine cell composition defines human islet functional phenotypes

Preprint on BioRxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology on 21 November 2024 by Evans-Molina, C., Pettway, Y. D., et al.

SUMMARY Phenotyping and genotyping initiatives within the Integrated Islet Distribution Program (IIDP), the largest source of human islets for research in the U.S., provide standardized assessment of islet preparations distributed to researchers, enabling the integration of multiple data types. Data from islets of the first 299 organ donors without diabetes, analyzed using this pipeline, highlights substantial heterogeneity in islet cell composition associated with hormone secretory traits, sex, reported race and ethnicity, genetically predicted ancestry, and genetic risk for type 2 diabetes (T2D). While α and β cell composition influenced insulin and glucagon secretory traits, the abundance of δ cells showed the strongest association with insulin secretion and was also associated with the genetic risk score (GRS) for T2D. These findings have important implications for understanding mechanisms underlying diabetes heterogeneity and islet dysfunction and may provide insight into strategies for personalized medicine and β cell replacement therapy.

Arginine vasopressin (AVP) has been reported to regulate insulin secretion and glucose homeostasis in the body. Previous study has shown that AVP and its receptor V1bR modulate insulin secretion via the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. AVP has also been shown to enhance insulin secretion in islets, but the exact mechanism remains unclear.
In our study, we unexpectedly discovered that AVP could only stimulates insulin secretion from islets, but not β cells, and AVP-induced insulin secretion could be blocked by V1bR selective antagonist. Single-cell transcriptome analysis identified that V1bR is only expressed by the α cells. Further studies indicated that activation of the V1bR stimulates the α cells to secrete glucagon, which then promotes glucose-dependent insulin secretion from β cells in a paracrine way by activating GLP-1R but not GCGR on these cells.
Our study revealed a crosstalk between α and β cells initiated by AVP/V1bR and mediated by glucagon/GLP-1R, providing a mechanism to develop new glucose-controlling therapies targeting V1bR.
© 2024. The Author(s).

Genetic risk converges on regulatory networks mediating early type 2 diabetes.

In Nature on 1 December 2023 by Walker, J. T., Saunders, D. C., et al.

Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D), a major cause of worldwide morbidity and mortality, is characterized by dysfunction of insulin-producing pancreatic islet β cells1,2. T2D genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified hundreds of signals in non-coding and β cell regulatory genomic regions, but deciphering their biological mechanisms remains challenging3-5. Here, to identify early disease-driving events, we performed traditional and multiplexed pancreatic tissue imaging, sorted-islet cell transcriptomics and islet functional analysis of early-stage T2D and control donors. By integrating diverse modalities, we show that early-stage T2D is characterized by β cell-intrinsic defects that can be proportioned into gene regulatory modules with enrichment in signals of genetic risk. After identifying the β cell hub gene and transcription factor RFX6 within one such module, we demonstrated multiple layers of genetic risk that converge on an RFX6-mediated network to reduce insulin secretion by β cells. RFX6 perturbation in primary human islet cells alters β cell chromatin architecture at regions enriched for T2D GWAS signals, and population-scale genetic analyses causally link genetically predicted reduced RFX6 expression with increased T2D risk. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of complex, systemic diseases necessitates integration of signals from multiple molecules, cells, organs and individuals, and thus we anticipate that this approach will be a useful template to identify and validate key regulatory networks and master hub genes for other diseases or traits using GWAS data.
© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

The free fatty acid receptor 1 (FFAR1/GPR40) mediates fatty acid-induced insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells. At least 3 distinct binding sites exist on the FFAR1 receptor and numerous synthetic ligands have been investigated for their anti-diabetic actions. Fasiglifam, binds to site-1 and stimulates intra-cellular calcium release and improves glycemic control in diabetic patients. Recently, small molecule FFAR1 agonists were discovered which bind to site-3, stimulating both intra-cellular calcium and cAMP, resulting in insulin and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) secretion. The ability of our site-3 FFAR1 agonist (compound A) to control blood glucose was evaluated in spontaneously diabetic cynomolgus monkeys during an oral glucose tolerance test. In type-2 diabetic (T2D) animals, significant reductions in blood glucose and insulin were noted. To better understand the mechanism of these in vivo findings, we evaluated the effect of compound A in islets under several conditions of dysfunction. First, healthy human and non-human primate islets were treated with compound A and showed potentiation of insulin and glucagon secretion from both species. Next, we determined glucose-responsive insulin secretion under gluco-lipotoxic conditions and from islets isolated from type-2 diabetic humans. Despite a dysfunctional phenotype that failed to secrete insulin in response to glucose, site-3 FFAR1 agonism not only enhanced insulin secretion, but restored glucose responsiveness across a range of glucose concentrations. Lastly, we treated ex vivo human islets chronically with a sulfonylurea to induce secondary beta-cell failure. Again, this model showed reduced glucose-responsive insulin secretion that was restored and potentiated by site-3 FFAR1 agonism. Together these data suggest a mechanism for FFAR1 where agonists have direct effects on islet hormone secretion that can overcome a dysfunctional T2D phenotype. These unique characteristics of FFAR1 site-3 agonists make them an appealing potential therapy to treat type-2 diabetes.
Copyright © 2022 Rady, Liu, Huang, Bakaj, Qi, Lee, Martin, Norquay, Player and Pocai.

View this product on CiteAb