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Foxa2 and Pdx1 cooperatively regulate postnatal maturation of pancreatic β-cells

Authors :
Aimée Bastidas-Ponce
Sara S. Roscioni
Michael Sterr
Mostafa Bakhti
Ingo Burtscher
Heiko Lickert
Erik Bader
Source :
Molecular Metabolism, Vol 6, Iss 6, Pp 524-534 (2017), Molecular Metabolism, Mol. Metab. 6, 524-534 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

Objective The transcription factors (TF) Foxa2 and Pdx1 are key regulators of beta-cell (β-cell) development and function. Mutations of these TFs or their respective cis-regulatory consensus binding sites have been linked to maturity diabetes of the young (MODY), pancreas agenesis, or diabetes susceptibility in human. Although Foxa2 has been shown to directly regulate Pdx1 expression during mouse embryonic development, the impact of this gene regulatory interaction on postnatal β-cell maturation remains obscure. Methods In order to easily monitor the expression domains of Foxa2 and Pdx1 and analyze their functional interconnection, we generated a novel double knock-in homozygous (FVFPBFDHom) fluorescent reporter mouse model by crossing the previously described Foxa2-Venus fusion (FVF) with the newly generated Pdx1-BFP (blue fluorescent protein) fusion (PBF) mice. Results Although adult PBF homozygous animals exhibited a reduction in expression levels of Pdx1, they are normoglycemic. On the contrary, despite normal pancreas and endocrine development, the FVFPBFDHom reporter male animals developed hyperglycemia at weaning age and displayed a reduction in Pdx1 levels in islets, which coincided with alterations in β-cell number and islet architecture. The failure to establish mature β-cells resulted in loss of β-cell identity and trans-differentiation towards other endocrine cell fates. Further analysis suggested that Foxa2 and Pdx1 genetically and functionally cooperate to regulate maturation of adult β-cells. Conclusions Our data show that the maturation of pancreatic β-cells requires the cooperative function of Foxa2 and Pdx1. Understanding the postnatal gene regulatory network of β-cell maturation will help to decipher pathomechanisms of diabetes and identify triggers to regenerate dedifferentiated β-cell mass.<br />Highlights • Fusion of fluorescent proteins to Foxa2 and Pdx1 induce hyperglycemia at weaning age. • Double knock-in (FVFPBFDHom) reporter animals exhibit low expression levels of Pdx1 protein. • FVFPBFDHom reporter male mice show impairment in β-cell maturation and function. • Cooperative function of Foxa2 and Pdx1 regulates postnatal maturation of β-cells.

Details

ISSN :
22128778
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a21bbd1c082c9e01b367e9053cae8e1d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2017.03.007