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Notch-mediated Ephrin signaling disrupts islet architecture and β cell function.

Citation
Bartolome, A., et al. “Notch-Mediated Ephrin Signaling Disrupts Islet Architecture And Β Cell Function.”. Jci Insight.
Center Columbia University
Author Alberto Bartolome, Nina Suda, Junjie Yu, Changyu Zhu, Jinsook Son, Hongxu Ding, Andrea Califano, Domenico Accili, Utpal B Pajvani
Keywords Cell migration/adhesion, diabetes, Endocrinology, Islet cells
Abstract

Altered islet architecture is associated with β cell dysfunction and type 2 diabetes (T2D) progression, but molecular effectors of islet spatial organization remain mostly unknown. Although Notch signaling is known to regulate pancreatic development, we observed "reactivated" β cell Notch activity in obese mouse models. To test the repercussions and reversibility of Notch effects, we generated doxycycline-dependent, β cell-specific Notch gain-of-function mice. As predicted, we found that Notch activation in postnatal β cells impaired glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and glucose intolerance, but we observed a surprising remnant glucose intolerance after doxycycline withdrawal and cessation of Notch activity, associated with a marked disruption of normal islet architecture. Transcriptomic screening of Notch-active islets revealed increased Ephrin signaling. Commensurately, exposure to Ephrin ligands increased β cell repulsion and impaired murine and human pseudoislet formation. Consistent with our mouse data, Notch and Ephrin signaling were increased in metabolically inflexible β cells in patients with T2D. These studies suggest that β cell Notch/Ephrin signaling can permanently alter islet architecture during a morphogenetic window in early life.

Year of Publication
2022
Journal
JCI insight
Volume
7
Issue
6
Date Published
03/2022
ISSN Number
2379-3708
DOI
10.1172/jci.insight.157694
Alternate Journal
JCI Insight
PMID
35167496
PMCID
PMC8986078
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