Abstract
Recently, the antimalarial drug, artemether and the neurotransmitter GABA were identified to convert alpha cells into beta-like cells in vivo. However, some of these observations were challenged by other studies. To help address the controversy, we took advantage of zebrafish as a model to perform this study. First, we performed a small-molecule screening for artemether and its skeleton analogues. Second, we used the Cre-LoxP system for lineage tracing to indicate the conversion of alpha cells into beta cells in vivo. The stable transgenic ins2:eGFP αTC1-6-cell line was used for evaluation of alpha-cell transdifferentiation in vitro. We further used multiple zebrafish transgenic and mutation lines to demonstrate beta-cell differentiation, beta-cell ablation and alpha-cell hyperplasia in this study. We showed that artemether and another sesquiterpene, aspterric acid, induced alpha-cell transdifferentiation into beta cells, both in zebrafish as well as using αTC1-6 cells. Furthermore, these two compounds also converted alpha cells into beta cells when beta cells were lost or alpha cells were hyperplastic in zebrafish. Unlike the previous report, the conversion of alpha cells to beta cells was mediated by increasing Pax4 expression, but not suppression of Arx expression. Our data suggest that in zebrafish and αTC1-6 cells, both artemether and aspterric acid induce alpha-cell transdifferentiation. Our data, along with those of Li et al. (2017), suggested that artemether and aspterric acid were able to induce alpha-cell transdifferentiation, at least in zebrafish and αTC1-6 cells.
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