Glucagon-containing α-cells potently regulate glucose homeostasis, but the developmental biology of α-cells in adults remains poorly understood. Although glucagon receptor antagonists (GRAs) have great potential as antidiabetic therapies, murine and human studies have raised concerns that GRAs might cause uncontrolled α-cell growth. Surprisingly, previous rodent GRA studies were only performed in young mice, implying that the potential impact of GRAs to drive α-cell expansion in adult patients is unclear. We assessed adaptive α-cell turnover and adaptive proliferation, administering a novel GRA (JNJ-46207382) to both young and aged mice. Basal α-cell proliferation rapidly declined soon after birth and continued to drop to very low levels in aged mice. GRA drove a 2.4-fold increase in α-cell proliferation in young mice. In contrast, GRA-induced α-cell proliferation was severely reduced in aged mice, although still present at 3.2-fold the very low basal rate of aged controls. To interrogate the lineage of GRA-induced α-cells, we sequentially administered thymidine analogs and quantified their incorporation into α-cells. Similar to previous studies of β-cells, α-cells only divided once in both basal and stimulated conditions. Lack of contribution from highly proliferative "transit-amplifying" cells supports a model whereby α-cells expand by self-renewal and not via specialized progenitors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db18-1293 | DOI Listing |
Cancer Res
June 2021
Department of Cancer Biology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Ethnicity is considered to be one of the major risk factors in certain subtypes of breast cancer. However, the mechanism of this racial disparity remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that SOS1, a key regulator of Ras pathway, is highly expressed in African-American (AA) patients with breast cancer compared with Caucasian-American patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
March 2013
The Department of Medical Genetics and Signal Transduction Research Group, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
It is well established that EGFR signals from both the plasma membrane (PM) and endosome (EN). However, very little is known about whether and how the EGFR signals at the PM and EN to differentially regulate various signaling pathways and the physiological outcomes. In this communication, we established a system that allowed the specific activations of EGFR at different cell locations: PM and EN.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Cancer
December 1998
Department of Biochemistry, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
A brain tumour-associated marker, urokinase (UK), was investigated using rabbit anti-UK polyclonal and murine anti-UK monoclonal antibodies, which were prepared by immunization with low molecular weight UK (LMW-UK) and high molecular weight urokinase (HMW-UK) synthetic peptide respectively. The polyclonal antibody cross-reacted with both LMW-UK and HMW-UK, whereas the murine MAbs were specific for HMW-UK. These immunological probes were used to study urokinase in glioma extracts, tissues, sera and cell lines that had been prepared from primary cultures of freshly dissected gliomas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol
April 1986
An ascites subline (AA) of the murine sarcoma MC1M grows in vivo in the peritoneal cavity but dies in vitro when cultured on glass or collagen. The viability of AA cells in vitro is not influenced in cocultures with fibroblast cell line L929, and is diminished in cocultures supplemented with macrophage culture supernatant or in cocultures with non-adherent peritoneal cells. However, AA cells proliferate in vitro on glass or collagen when cocultured with syngeneic, semisyngeneic, and allogeneic peritoneal macrophages.
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