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- SIX2 and SIX3 coordinately regulate functional maturity and fate of human pancreatic β cells.
SIX2 and SIX3 coordinately regulate functional maturity and fate of human pancreatic β cells.
Citation | “Six2 And Six3 Coordinately Regulate Functional Maturity And Fate Of Human Pancreatic Β Cells.”. Genes & Development, pp. 234-249. . |
Center | Stanford University |
Author | Romina J Bevacqua, Jonathan Y Lam, Heshan Peiris, Robert L Whitener, Seokho Kim, Xueying Gu, Mollie S H Friedlander, Seung K Kim |
Keywords | diabetes mellitus, islet, pancreas, transcription factor, β cells |
Abstract |
The physiological functions of many vital tissues and organs continue to mature after birth, but the genetic mechanisms governing this postnatal maturation remain an unsolved mystery. Human pancreatic β cells produce and secrete insulin in response to physiological cues like glucose, and these hallmark functions improve in the years after birth. This coincides with expression of the transcription factors SIX2 and SIX3, whose functions in native human β cells remain unknown. Here, we show that shRNA-mediated or suppression in human pancreatic adult islets impairs insulin secretion. However, transcriptome studies revealed that and regulate distinct targets. Loss of markedly impaired expression of genes governing β-cell insulin processing and output, glucose sensing, and electrophysiology, while loss led to inappropriate expression of genes normally expressed in fetal β cells, adult α cells, and other non-β cells. Chromatin accessibility studies identified genes directly regulated by SIX2. Moreover, β cells from diabetic humans with impaired insulin secretion also had reduced transcript levels. Revealing how and govern functional maturation and maintain developmental fate in native human β cells should advance β-cell replacement and other therapeutic strategies for diabetes. |
Year of Publication |
2021
|
Journal |
Genes & development
|
Volume |
35
|
Issue |
3-4
|
Number of Pages |
234-249
|
Date Published |
02/2021
|
ISSN Number |
1549-5477
|
DOI |
10.1101/gad.342378.120
|
Alternate Journal |
Genes Dev
|
PMID |
33446570
|
PMCID |
PMC7849364
|
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