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Cyclin D2 is sufficient to drive β cell self-renewal and regeneration.

Citation
Tschen, S. -I., et al. “Cyclin D2 Is Sufficient To Drive Β Cell Self-Renewal And Regeneration.”. Cell Cycle (Georgetown, Tex.), pp. 2183-2191.
Author Shuen-Ing Tschen, Chun Zeng, Loren Field, Sangeeta Dhawan, Anil Bhushan, Senta Georgia
Keywords cell cycle, cyclin D2, diabetes, insulin, β cell regeneration
Abstract

Diabetes results from an inadequate mass of functional β cells, due to either β cell loss caused by autoimmune destruction (type I diabetes) or β cell failure in response to insulin resistance (type II diabetes). Elucidating the mechanisms that regulate β cell mass may be key to developing new techniques that foster β cell regeneration as a cellular therapy to treat diabetes. While previous studies concluded that cyclin D2 is required for postnatal β cell self-renewal in mice, it is not clear if cyclin D2 is sufficient to drive β cell self-renewal. Using transgenic mice that overexpress cyclin D2 specifically in β cells, we show that cyclin D2 overexpression increases β cell self-renewal post-weaning and results in increased β cell mass. β cells that overexpress cyclin D2 are responsive to glucose stimulation, suggesting they are functionally mature. β cells that overexpress cyclin D2 demonstrate an enhanced regenerative capacity after injury induced by streptozotocin toxicity. To understand if cyclin D2 overexpression is sufficient to drive β cell self-renewal, we generated a novel mouse model where cyclin D2 is only expressed in β cells of cyclin D2 mice. Transgenic overexpression of cyclin D2 in cyclin D2 β cells was sufficient to restore β cell mass, maintain normoglycaemia, and improve regenerative capacity when compared with cyclin D2 littermates. Taken together, our results indicate that cyclin D2 is sufficient to regulate β cell self-renewal and that manipulation of its expression could be used to enhance β cell regeneration.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Cell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.)
Volume
16
Issue
22
Number of Pages
2183-2191
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1551-4005
DOI
10.1080/15384101.2017.1319999
Alternate Journal
Cell Cycle
PMID
28763258
PMCID
PMC5736344
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