Abstract
β-cell mass in the pancreas increases significantly during pregnancy as an adaptation to maternal insulin resistance. Lineage tracing studies in rodents have presented conflicting evidence on the role of cell duplication in the formation of new β-cells during gestation, while recent human data suggest that new islets are a major contributor to increased β-cell mass in pregnancy. Here, we aim to: 1) determine whether a non-β-cell source contributes to the appearance of new β-cells during pregnancy and 2) investigate whether recapitulation of the embryonic developmental pathway involving high expression of neurogenin 3 (Ngn3) plays a role in the up-regulation of β-cell mass during pregnancy. Using a mouse β-cell lineage-tracing model, which labels insulin-producing β-cells with red fluorescent protein (RFP), we found that the percentage of labeled β-cells dropped from 97% prior to pregnancy to 87% at mid-pregnancy. This suggests contribution of a non-β-cell source to the increase in total β-cell numbers during pregnancy. In addition, we observed a population of hormone-negative, Ngn3-positive cells in islets of both non-pregnant and pregnant mice, and this population dropped from 12% of all islets cells in the non-pregnant mice to 5% by day 8 of pregnancy. Concomitantly, a decrease in expression of Ngn3 and changes in its upstream regulatory network (Sox9 and Hes-1) as well as downstream targets (NeuroD, Nkx2.2, Rfx6 and IA1) were also observed during pregnancy. Our results show that duplication of pre-existing β-cells is not the sole source of new β-cells during pregnancy and that Ngn3 may be involved in this process.
Highlights
During pregnancy, the maternal pancreas adapts to increased insulin resistance and metabolic demand by up-regulating b-cell mass
All new b-cells derived from b-cells that were present before pregnancy will be insulinpositive and RFP-positive
All new b-cells arising from another cell source, i.e. a source other than pre-existing b-cells, will be RFP- and insulin-positive (RFP2/insulin+) (Figure 1B)
Summary
The maternal pancreas adapts to increased insulin resistance and metabolic demand by up-regulating b-cell mass. A recent study in humans suggested that formation of new islets, not duplication of b-cells in pre-existing islets, is the main source of bcell mass increase during pregnancy [13]. This conclusion stemmed from the observation of a higher number of small islets and single b-cells (not associated with the islet) in pancreata of pregnant women compared to non-pregnant women [2,13], as small islets and single b-cells are often interpreted as evidence of bcell regeneration. The major caveat here is that lineage tracing in humans is still not available, so the evidence is indirect
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