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- The Pdx1-Bound Swi/Snf Chromatin Remodeling Complex Regulates Pancreatic Progenitor Cell Proliferation and Mature Islet β-Cell Function.
The Pdx1-Bound Swi/Snf Chromatin Remodeling Complex Regulates Pancreatic Progenitor Cell Proliferation and Mature Islet β-Cell Function.
Citation | “The Pdx1-Bound Swi/Snf Chromatin Remodeling Complex Regulates Pancreatic Progenitor Cell Proliferation And Mature Islet Β-Cell Function.”. Diabetes, pp. 1806-1818. . |
Center | Vanderbilt University |
Author | Jason M Spaeth, Jin-Hua Liu, Daniel Peters, Min Guo, Anna B Osipovich, Fardin Mohammadi, Nilotpal Roy, Anil Bhushan, Mark A Magnuson, Matthias Hebrok, Christopher E Wright V, Roland Stein |
Abstract |
Transcription factors positively and/or negatively impact gene expression by recruiting coregulatory factors, which interact through protein-protein binding. Here we demonstrate that mouse pancreas size and islet β-cell function are controlled by the ATP-dependent Swi/Snf chromatin remodeling coregulatory complex that physically associates with Pdx1, a diabetes-linked transcription factor essential to pancreatic morphogenesis and adult islet cell function and maintenance. Early embryonic deletion of just the Swi/Snf Brg1 ATPase subunit reduced multipotent pancreatic progenitor cell proliferation and resulted in pancreas hypoplasia. In contrast, removal of both Swi/Snf ATPase subunits, Brg1 and Brm, was necessary to compromise adult islet β-cell activity, which included whole-animal glucose intolerance, hyperglycemia, and impaired insulin secretion. Notably, lineage-tracing analysis revealed Swi/Snf-deficient β-cells lost the ability to produce the mRNAs for and other key metabolic genes without effecting the expression of many essential islet-enriched transcription factors. Swi/Snf was necessary for Pdx1 to bind to the gene enhancer, demonstrating the importance of this association in mediating chromatin accessibility. These results illustrate how fundamental the Pdx1:Swi/Snf coregulator complex is in the pancreas, and we discuss how disrupting their association could influence type 1 and type 2 diabetes susceptibility. |
Year of Publication |
2019
|
Journal |
Diabetes
|
Volume |
68
|
Issue |
9
|
Number of Pages |
1806-1818
|
Date Published |
12/2019
|
ISSN Number |
1939-327X
|
DOI |
10.2337/db19-0349
|
Alternate Journal |
Diabetes
|
PMID |
31201281
|
PMCID |
PMC6702633
|
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