Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

New cause of diabetes

02.18.16 | Center for iPS Cell Research and Application - Kyoto University

Apple iPhone 17 Pro

Apple iPhone 17 Pro delivers top performance and advanced cameras for field documentation, data collection, and secure research communications.


Diabetes describes a disease where the body is not receiving a sufficient supply of insulin. It commonly inflicts the pancreas, the organ responsible for insulin production. More specifically, it inflicts the cells that produce insulin, which are found in the endocrine tissue of the pancreas. However, new results from the Yoshiya Kawaguchi lab suggest the exocrine tissue, which is responsible for digestion, could have a role in treatment. "The pancreas is constituted of two tissues that are structurally and functionally distinct, which makes it unique", says Prof. Yoshiya Kawaguchi of the Center for iPS Cell Research and Application, Kyoto University, which is why most researchers attend the endocrine tissue for diabetes.

However, while the exocrine and endocrine tissues operate independently in mature pancreas, they are formed at the same time during pancreas development. Kawaguchi wondered if diseased exocrine tissue could cause deficiencies in the production of endocrine cells. To investigate this possibility, his team constructed mice that depleted the Pdx1 gene, which in the pancreas is exclusively found in exocrine tissue. The result was underdeveloped pancreas, but in addition, and surprisingly, the mice showed diabetes phenotype, such as low insulin levels, suggesting endocrine development was also affected. However, what caught the researchers' attention was which cells had changed. Endocrine progenitor cells that did not have the mutation in the mutant mice also showed poor survival. These results suggest non-cell autonomous effects, which describes the phenomenon where cells with genetic defects may cause malfunction in neighboring, genetically healthy cells, and could have important implications for diabetes treatment.

"This is an exciting finding", explains Kawaguchi, adding, "It means the exocrine cells secrete something that promotes the differentiation and survival of endocrine cells during development". This substance, Kawaguchi hopes, could lead to promising treatments for diabetes.

###

Scientific Reports

10.1038/srep21211

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Peter Karagiannis
Center for iPS Cell Research and Application - Kyoto University
peter@cira.kyoto-u.ac.jp

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Center for iPS Cell Research and Application - Kyoto University. (2016, February 18). New cause of diabetes. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LR5NY3M8/new-cause-of-diabetes.html
MLA:
"New cause of diabetes." Brightsurf News, Feb. 18 2016, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LR5NY3M8/new-cause-of-diabetes.html.