Rfx6 Maintains the Functional Identity of Adult Pancreatic β Cells

0303 health sciences QH301-705.5 Regulatory Factor X Transcription Factors Sulfonylurea Receptors Article Exocytosis DNA-Binding Proteins Mice 03 medical and health sciences Glucose Insulin-Secreting Cells Glucokinase Glucose Intolerance Animals Insulin Calcium Channels Gene Silencing Biology (General) Cells, Cultured Transcription Factors
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2014.11.033 Publication Date: 2014-12-11T18:41:30Z
ABSTRACT
Increasing evidence suggests that loss of β cell characteristics may cause insulin secretory deficiency in diabetes, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we show that Rfx6, whose mutation leads to neonatal diabetes in humans, is essential to maintain key features of functionally mature β cells in mice. Rfx6 loss in adult β cells leads to glucose intolerance, impaired β cell glucose sensing, and defective insulin secretion. This is associated with reduced expression of core components of the insulin secretion pathway, including glucokinase, the Abcc8/SUR1 subunit of KATP channels and voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels, which are direct targets of Rfx6. Moreover, Rfx6 contributes to the silencing of the vast majority of "disallowed" genes, a group usually specifically repressed in adult β cells, and thus to the maintenance of β cell maturity. These findings raise the possibility that changes in Rfx6 expression or activity may contribute to β cell failure in humans.
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