Increased hormone-negative endocrine cells in the pancreas in type 1 diabetes

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Abstract

Context and Objective: Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is characterized by a β-cell deficit due to autoimmune inflammatory-mediated β-cell destruction. It has been proposed the deficit in β-cell mass in T1D may be in part due to β-cell degranulation to chromogranin-positive, hormone-negative (CPHN) cells. Design, Setting, and Participants: We investigated the frequency and distribution of CPHN cells in the pancreas of 15 individuals with T1D, 17 autoantibody-positive nondiabetic individuals, and 17 nondiabetic controls. Results: CPHN cells were present at a low frequency in the pancreas from nondiabetic and autoantibody- positive, brain-dead organ donors but are more frequently found in the pancreas from donors with T1D (islets: 1.11% ± 0.20% vs 0.26% ± 0.06 vs 0.27% ± 0.10% of islet endocrine cells, T1D vs autoantibody positive [AA+] vs nondiabetic [ND]; T1D vsAA+, and ND, P < .0001), mimicking the distribution present in neonatal pancreas. Conclusions: From these observations, we conclude that CPHN cells are more frequent in T1D and, as in type 2 diabetes, are distributed in a pattern comparable with the neonatal pancreas, implying a possible attempted regeneration. In contrast to rodents, CPHN cells are insufficient to account for loss of β-cell mass in T1D.

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APA

Moin, A. S. M., Dhawan, S., Shieh, C., Butler, P. C., Cory, M., & Butler, A. E. (2016). Increased hormone-negative endocrine cells in the pancreas in type 1 diabetes. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 101(9), 3487–3496. https://doi.org/10.1210/jc.2016-1350

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