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Combined Inhibition of DYRK1A, SMAD, and Trithorax Pathways Synergizes to Induce Robust Replication in Adult Human Beta Cells.

Citation
Wang, P., et al. “Combined Inhibition Of Dyrk1A, Smad, And Trithorax Pathways Synergizes To Induce Robust Replication In Adult Human Beta Cells.”. Cell Metabolism, pp. 638-652.e5.
Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Featured
Author Peng Wang, Esra Karakose, Hongtao Liu, Ethan Swartz, Courtney Ackeifi, Viktor Zlatanic, Jessica Wilson, Bryan J González, Aaron Bender, Karen K Takane, Lillian Ye, George Harb, Felicia Pagliuca, Dirk Homann, Dieter Egli, Carmen Argmann, Donald K Scott, Adolfo Garcia-Ocaña, Andrew F Stewart
Keywords DYRK1A, SMAD, TGFbeta, beta cell, diabetes, harmine, proliferation, regeneration
Abstract

Small-molecule inhibitors of dual-specificity tyrosine-regulated kinase 1A (DYRK1A) induce human beta cells to proliferate, generating a labeling index of 1.5%-3%. Here, we demonstrate that combined pharmacologic inhibition of DYRK1A and transforming growth factor beta superfamily (TGFβSF)/SMAD signaling generates remarkable further synergistic increases in human beta cell proliferation (average labeling index, 5%-8%, and as high as 15%-18%), and increases in both mouse and human beta cell numbers. This synergy reflects activation of cyclins and cdks by DYRK1A inhibition, accompanied by simultaneous reductions in key cell-cycle inhibitors (CDKN1C and CDKN1A). The latter results from interference with the basal Trithorax- and SMAD-mediated transactivation of CDKN1C and CDKN1A. Notably, combined DYRK1A and TGFβ inhibition allows preservation of beta cell differentiated function. These beneficial effects extend from normal human beta cells and stem cell-derived human beta cells to those from people with type 2 diabetes, and occur both in vitro and in vivo.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Cell metabolism
Volume
29
Issue
3
Number of Pages
638-652.e5
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1932-7420
DOI
10.1016/j.cmet.2018.12.005
Alternate Journal
Cell Metab.
PMID
30581122
PMCID
PMC6402958
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