New research has identified a subpopulation of immature adult β cells that is proliferative and can also be differentiated into mature insulin-producing β cells. The findings published in Nature by researchers from the Helmholtz Centre, Munich, Germany, represent a step towards replacing dysfunctional or lost β cells in patients with diabetes mellitus.
“Although different subpopulations of β cells have been known to exist for over 50 years, the mechanisms underlying this heterogeneity have remained unknown due to a lack of molecular markers capable of distinguishing between the different subpopulations,” explains lead investigator Heiko Lickert. “We, therefore, screened for markers that could subdivide insulin-producing β-cell populations and identified Fltp (encoding the protein Flattop), a Wnt/planar cell polarity (PCP) effector and reporter gene involved in the acquisition of tissue polarity and 3D architecture.”
...Fltp expression correlates with β-cell proliferative capacity and subdivides β cells into either proliferative or mature cells
To distinguish between β cells expressing Fltp from those not expressing the gene, the investigators generated a knockin/knockout mouse (FltpZV), in which the open-reading frame of Fltp was replaced by a cassette encoding a fluorescent reporter protein designated FVR, such that cells normally expressing Fltp (FVR+) fluoresced. In heterozygous FltpZV mice, two β-cell populations were identified — FVR+ and FVR−. The percentage of FVR+ cells in islets increased from 50% at postnatal day (P) 1 to 80% at 12 weeks (adult mice). The biological significance of the two β-cell populations was demonstrated by measuring their rates of proliferation at gestational day 15.5, P1, P11 and 12 weeks. At all time points, proliferation was markedly increased in FVR− cells compared with FVR+ cells, which suggests that Fltp expression correlates with β-cell proliferative capacity and subdivides β cells into either proliferative or mature cells.
To test this hypothesis, the team purified the two β-cell populations and performed genome-wide mRNA profiling, identifying 997 genes differentially expressed by >1.5-fold between FVR− and FVR+ cells. Noticeably, the FVR− population was enriched in genes associated with G-protein-coupled receptor, Wnt and MAPK signalling pathways (which mediate responses to environmental cues), whereas the FVR+ population was enriched in genes involved in mature β-cell function (including Wnt/PCP genes), further supporting the notion that FVR+ (Fltp expressing) cells are mature β cells and linking planar polarity with β-cell maturation. As the gene expression analysis suggested the two populations of β cells react differently to environmental changes, the investigators performed in vitro single-cell tracking to follow the fate of cells over time. Remarkably, Fltp-lineage negative cells became Fltp-lineage positive cells, which indicates that FVR− cells differentiate into FVR+ mature β cells. Finally, by treating reaggregated β cells and pseudo-islets of Min6 insulinoma cells with the Wnt/PCP ligand Wnt5a, the team showed that 3D architecture and Wnt/PCP ligands are sufficient to initiate β-cell maturation.
“Activating the receptors and pathways that associate with the two β-cell populations might enable us to target β-cell proliferation and maturation for islet-regeneration therapy,” speculates Lickert. “Moreover, as stem-cell-derived β-like cells can be differentiated in vitro but are not functionally mature, our finding of a novel marker of the transition and the pathway involved provides a way to improve differentiation protocols for cell-replacement therapy.”
References
Bader, E. et al. Identification of proliferative and mature β-cells in the islets of Langerhans. Nature http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature18624 (2016)
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Holmes, D. β-cell heterogeneity — key to unlocking islet regeneration. Nat Rev Endocrinol 12, 495 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/nrendo.2016.122
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nrendo.2016.122