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Spontaneous restoration of functional β-cell mass in obese SM/J mice.

Physiological reports (2020-10-29)
Mario A Miranda, Caryn Carson, Celine L St Pierre, Juan F Macias-Velasco, Jing W Hughes, Marcus Kunzmann, Heather Schmidt, Jessica P Wayhart, Heather A Lawson
ABSTRACT

Maintenance of functional β-cell mass is critical to preventing diabetes, but the physiological mechanisms that cause β-cell populations to thrive or fail in the context of obesity are unknown. High fat-fed SM/J mice spontaneously transition from hyperglycemic-obese to normoglycemic-obese with age, providing a unique opportunity to study β-cell adaptation. Here, we characterize insulin homeostasis, islet morphology, and β-cell function during SM/J's diabetic remission. As they resolve hyperglycemia, obese SM/J mice dramatically increase circulating and pancreatic insulin levels while improving insulin sensitivity. Immunostaining of pancreatic sections reveals that obese SM/J mice selectively increase β-cell mass but not α-cell mass. Obese SM/J mice do not show elevated β-cell mitotic index, but rather elevated α-cell mitotic index. Functional assessment of isolated islets reveals that obese SM/J mice increase glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, decrease basal insulin secretion, and increase islet insulin content. These results establish that β-cell mass expansion and improved β-cell function underlie the resolution of hyperglycemia, indicating that obese SM/J mice are a valuable tool for exploring how functional β-cell mass can be recovered in the context of obesity.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-phospho-Histone H3.1 (pSer10) antibody produced in rabbit, affinity isolated antibody