Abstract
Proliferation pancreatic β-cells important mechanism underlying β-cell mass adaptation to metabolic demands. Increasing β-cell mass by regeneration may ameliorate or correct both type 1 and type 2 diabetes, which both result from inadequate production of insulin by β-cells of the pancreatic islet. Transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) signaling is essential for fetal development and growth of pancreatic islets. In this study, we exposed HIT-T15, a clonal pancreatic β-cell line, to TGF-β signaling. We found that inhibition of TGF-β signaling promotes proliferation of the cells significantly, while TGF-β signaling stimulation inhibits proliferation of the cells remarkably. We confirmed that this proliferative regulation by TGFβ signaling is due to the changed expression of the cell cycle regulator p27. Furthermore, we demonstrated that there is no observed effect on transcriptional activity of p27 by TGFβ signaling. Our data show that TGF-β signaling mediates the cell-cycle progression of pancreatic β-cells by regulating the nuclear localization of CDK inhibitor, p27. Inhibition of TGF-β signaling reduces the nuclear accumulation of p27, and as a result this inhibition promotes proliferation of β-cells. © 2013 The Japan Society of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry.
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Suzuki, T., Dai, P., Hatakeyama, T., Harada, Y., Tanaka, H., Yoshimura, N., & Takamatsu, T. (2013). TGF-β signaling regulates pancreatic β-cell proliferation through control of cell cycle regulator p27 expression. Acta Histochemica et Cytochemica, 46(2), 51–58. https://doi.org/10.1267/ahc.12035
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