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Conversion of adult pancreatic α-cells to β-cells after extreme β-cell loss

TLDR
In this article, a transgenic model of diphtheria-toxin-induced acute selective near-total beta-cell ablation was used to investigate whether adult mammals can differentiate (regenerate) new beta-cells after extreme, total β-cell loss, as in diabetes.
Abstract
Pancreatic insulin-producing beta-cells have a long lifespan, such that in healthy conditions they replicate little during a lifetime. Nevertheless, they show increased self-duplication after increased metabolic demand or after injury (that is, beta-cell loss). It is not known whether adult mammals can differentiate (regenerate) new beta-cells after extreme, total beta-cell loss, as in diabetes. This would indicate differentiation from precursors or another heterologous (non-beta-cell) source. Here we show beta-cell regeneration in a transgenic model of diphtheria-toxin-induced acute selective near-total beta-cell ablation. If given insulin, the mice survived and showed beta-cell mass augmentation with time. Lineage-tracing to label the glucagon-producing alpha-cells before beta-cell ablation tracked large fractions of regenerated beta-cells as deriving from alpha-cells, revealing a previously disregarded degree of pancreatic cell plasticity. Such inter-endocrine spontaneous adult cell conversion could be harnessed towards methods of producing beta-cells for diabetes therapies, either in differentiation settings in vitro or in induced regeneration.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Pancreatic Progenitors and Organoids as a Prerequisite to Model Pancreatic Diseases and Cancer.

TL;DR: Recent advances in directed differentiation of pancreatic organoids comprising endocrine cell types are summarized and up-and-coming applications for organoid-based platforms are illustrated.
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New Insights into Diabetes Cell Therapy.

TL;DR: The current studies suggested the pancreas as a reservoir of facultative progenitors could be exploited ex vivo for expansion and β cell differentiation in timely fashion and without the hurdles of PSC use.
Journal ArticleDOI

The double trouble of metabolic diseases: the diabetes–cancer link

TL;DR: The importance of combining clinical and basic mechanistic studies not only to unravel mechanisms of disease development but also to understand mechanisms of drug action may help the development of personalized strategies in which drug doses and administration durations are tailored to individual cases at different stages of the disease progression to achieve more efficacious treatments that undermine the diabetes–cancer association.
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IL-13 improves beta-cell survival and protects against IL-1beta-induced beta-cell death

TL;DR: It is suggested that IL-13 may be useful for treatment of type 2 diabetes by preserving beta-cell mass or slowing its rate of decline by mediated through IRS2/Akt signaling with NFκB independent regulation of gene expression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differential expression of neuregulin-1 isoforms and downregulation of erbin are associated with Erb B2 receptor activation in diabetic peripheral neuropathy

TL;DR: Results support that hyperglycemia may impair NRG1/Erb B2 signaling by disrupting the balance betweenNRG1 isoforms, decreasing the expression of erbin and correspondingly activating the MAPK pathway.
References
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Book

Manipulating the mouse embryo: A laboratory manual

TL;DR: Here are recorded the tech- niques for preparing, inserting and analysing DNA sequences, for retroviral infection of mice, for production and use of EC and EK cells as vehicles for engineered sequences and for nuclear transplantation - all against a background of the basic procedures required for pro- ducing and handling the em- bryos.
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Cre reporter strains produced by targeted insertion of EYFP and ECFP into the ROSA26 locus

TL;DR: In contrast to existing lacZ reporter lines, where lacZ expression cannot easily be detected in living tissue, the EYFP and ECFP reporter strains are useful for monitoring the expression of Cre and tracing the lineage of these cells and their descendants in cultured embryos or organs.
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Adult pancreatic beta-cells are formed by self-duplication rather than stem-cell differentiation.

TL;DR: This work introduces a method for genetic lineage tracing to determine the contribution of stem cells to a tissue of interest and suggests that terminally differentiated β-cells retain a significant proliferative capacity in vivo and casts doubt on the idea that adult stem cells have a significant role in β-cell replenishment.
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In vivo reprogramming of adult pancreatic exocrine cells to beta-cells.

TL;DR: This study identifies a specific combination of three transcription factors (Ngn3) Pdx1 and Mafa that reprograms differentiated pancreatic exocrine cells in adult mice into cells that closely resemble β-cells, and suggests a general paradigm for directing cell reprogramming without reversion to a pluripotent stem cell state.
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Exendin-4 stimulates both beta-cell replication and neogenesis, resulting in increased beta-cell mass and improved glucose tolerance in diabetic rats.

TL;DR: It is reported that exendin-4, a long-acting GLP-I agonist, stimulates both the differentiation of beta-cells from ductal progenitor cells (neogenesis) and proliferation of Beta-cells when administered to rats and holds promise as a novel therapy to stimulate beta-cell growth and differentiation when administer to diabetic individuals with reduced beta- cell mass.
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