1. Epigenetic dosage identifies two major and functionally distinct β cell subtypes
- Author
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Dror, E., Fagnocchi, L., Wegert, V., Apostle, S., Grimaldi, B., Gruber, T., Panzeri, I., Heyne, S., Höffler, K., Kreiner, V., Ching, R., Lu, T., Semwal, A., Johnson, B., Senapati, P., Lempradl, A., Schones, D., Imhof, A., Shen, H., and Pospisilik, J.
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Physiology ,Cell Biology ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
The mechanisms that specify and stabilize cell subtypes remain poorly understood. Here, we identify two major subtypes of pancreatic β cells based on histone mark heterogeneity (βHI and βLO). βHI cells exhibit ∼4-fold higher levels of H3K27me3, distinct chromatin organization and compaction, and a specific transcriptional pattern. βHI and βLO cells also differ in size, morphology, cytosolic and nuclear ultrastructure, epigenomes, cell surface marker expression, and function, and can be FACS separated into CD24+ and CD24- fractions. Functionally, βHI cells have increased mitochondrial mass, activity, and insulin secretion in vivo and ex vivo. Partial loss of function indicates that H3K27me3 dosage regulates βHI/βLO ratio in vivo, suggesting that control of β cell subtype identity and ratio is at least partially uncoupled. Both subtypes are conserved in humans, with βHI cells enriched in humans with type 2 diabetes. Thus, epigenetic dosage is a novel regulator of cell subtype specification and identifies two functionally distinct β cell subtypes.
- Published
- 2023
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