Harmine and exendin-4 combination therapy safely expands human β cell mass in vivo in a mouse xenograft system.
| Citation | Rosselot, Carolina, et al. “Harmine and Exendin-4 Combination Therapy Safely Expands Human β Cell Mass in Vivo in a Mouse Xenograft System”. 2024. Science Translational Medicine, vol. 16, no. 755, 2024, p. eadg3456. |
| Center | Albert Einstein College of Medicine |
| Featured |
Featured
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| Author | Carolina Rosselot, Yansui Li, Peng Wang, Alexandra Alvarsson, Kara Beliard, Geming Lu, Randy Kang, Rosemary Li, Hongtao Liu, Virginia Gillespie, Nikolaos Tzavaras, Kunal Kumar, Robert J DeVita, Andrew F Stewart, Sarah A Stanley, Adolfo Garcia-Ocaña |
| Abstract |
Five hundred thirty-seven million people globally suffer from diabetes. Insulin-producing β cells are reduced in number in most people with diabetes, but most individuals still have some residual β cells. However, none of the many diabetes drugs in common use increases human β cell numbers. Recently, small molecules that inhibit dual tyrosine-regulated kinase 1A (DYRK1A) have been shown to induce immunohistochemical markers of human β cell replication, and this is enhanced by drugs that stimulate the glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP1) receptor (GLP1R) on β cells. However, it remains to be demonstrated whether these immunohistochemical findings translate into an actual increase in human β cell numbers in vivo. It is also unknown whether DYRK1A inhibitors together with GLP1R agonists (GLP1RAs) affect human β cell survival. Here, using an optimized immunolabeling-enabled three-dimensional imaging of solvent-cleared organs (iDISCO) protocol in mouse kidneys bearing human islet grafts, we demonstrate that combination of a DYRK1A inhibitor with exendin-4 increases actual human β cell mass in vivo by a mean of four- to sevenfold in diabetic and nondiabetic mice over 3 months and reverses diabetes, without alteration in human α cell mass. The augmentation in human β cell mass occurred through mechanisms that included enhanced human β cell proliferation, function, and survival. The increase in human β cell survival was mediated, in part, by the islet prohormone VGF. Together, these findings demonstrate the therapeutic potential and favorable preclinical safety profile of the DYRK1A inhibitor-GLP1RA combination for diabetes treatment. |
| Year of Publication |
2024
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| Journal |
Science translational medicine
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| Volume |
16
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| Issue |
755
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| Number of Pages |
eadg3456
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| Date Published |
07/2024
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| ISSN Number |
1946-6242
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| DOI |
10.1126/scitranslmed.adg3456
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| Alternate Journal |
Sci Transl Med
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| PMID |
38985854
|
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