Permanent neonatal diabetes-causing insulin mutations have dominant negative effects on beta cell identity

永久性新生儿糖尿病胰岛素突变对β细胞身份有显性负面影响

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作者:Yuwei Zhang, Lina Sui, Qian Du, Leena Haataja, Yishu Yin, Ryan Viola, Shuangyi Xu, Christian Ulrik Nielsson, Rudolph L Leibel, Fabrizio Barbetti, Peter Arvan, Dieter Egli

Conclusions

These results highlight a novel mechanism, the loss of beta cell identity, contributing to the loss and functional failure of human beta cells with specific insulin gene mutations.

Methods

We explored the causes of beta cell failure in two PNDM patients with two distinct INS mutations using patient-derived iPSCs and mutated hESCs.

Objective

Heterozygous coding sequence mutations of the INS gene are a cause of permanent neonatal diabetes (PNDM), requiring insulin therapy similar to T1D. While the negative effects on insulin processing and secretion are known, how dominant insulin mutations result in a continued decline of beta cell function after birth is not well understood.

Results

we detected accumulation of misfolded proinsulin and impaired proinsulin processing in vitro, and a dominant-negative effect of these mutations on beta-cell mass and function after transplantation into mice. In addition to anticipated ER stress, we found evidence of beta-cell dedifferentiation, characterized by an increase of cells expressing both Nkx6.1 and ALDH1A3, but negative for insulin and glucagon. Conclusions: These results highlight a novel mechanism, the loss of beta cell identity, contributing to the loss and functional failure of human beta cells with specific insulin gene mutations.

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