Aims/hypothesis: A major focus in the treatment of diabetes is to identify factors that stimulate endogenous beta cell growth while preserving function. The first 36 amino acids of parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) are sufficient to enhance proliferation and function in rodent and human beta cells in vitro. This study examined whether acute and systemic administration of the amino-terminal PTHrP(1-36) peptide can achieve similar effects in rodent beta cells in vivo. Methods: Adult male mice were injected with 40, 80 or 160 μg of PTHrP(1-36) per kg body weight or with vehicle for 25 days. Glucose and beta cell homeostasis, as well as expression of differentiation markers and cell cycle genes were analysed. Results: All three doses of PTHrP(1-36) significantly enhanced beta cell proliferation in vivo at day 25, with 160 μg/kg PTHrP(1-36) increasing proliferation as early as day 5. Importantly, the two higher doses of PTHrP(1-36) caused a significant 30% expansion of beta cell mass, with a short-term improvement in glucose tolerance. PTHrP(1-36) did not cause hypercalcaemia, or change islet number, beta cell size, beta cell death or expression of differentiation markers. Analysis of islet G1/S cell cycle proteins revealed that chronic overabundance of PTHrP(1-139) in the beta cell significantly increased the cell cycle activator cyclin D2 and decreased levels of cyclin-dependent kinase 4 inhibitor (p16 Ink4a [Ink4a also known as Cdkn2a]), but acute treatment with PTHrP(1-36) did not. Conclusions/ interpretation: Acute and systemic administration of PTHrP(1-36) increases rodent beta cell proliferation and mass without negatively affecting function or survival. These findings highlight the future potential therapeutic effectiveness of this peptide under diabetes-related pathophysiological conditions. © 2011 Springer-Verlag.
CITATION STYLE
Williams, K., Abanquah, D., Joshi-Gokhale, S., Otero, A., Lin, H., Guthalu, N. K., … Vasavada, R. C. (2011). Systemic and acute administration of parathyroid hormone-related peptide(1-36) stimulates endogenous beta cell proliferation while preserving function in adult mice. Diabetologia, 54(11), 2867–2877. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-011-2260-z
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