Pleiotropic Roles of PDX-1 in the Pancreas

Authors

  • Hideaki Kaneto, Takeshi Miyatsuka, Dan Kawamori, Taka-aki Matsuoka Department of Internal Medicine and Therapeutics (A8), Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, 2-2 Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan

Keywords:

diabetes · beta-cell differentiation · PDX-1 · pancreas development · beta-cell glucose toxicity

Abstract

It is well known that pancreatic and duodenal homeobox factor-1 (PDX-1) plays a pleiotropic role in the pancreas. In the developing pancreas, PDX-1 is involved in both pancreas formation and β-cell differentiation. In mature β-cells, PDX-1 transactivates insulin and other β-cell-related genes such as GLUT2 and glucokinase. Furthermore, PDX-1 plays an important role in the induction of insulin-producing cells in various non-β-cells and is thereby a possible therapeutic target for diabetes. On the other hand, under diabetic conditions, expression and/or activity of PDX-1 in β-cells is reduced, which leads to suppression of insulin biosynthesis and secretion. It is likely that PDX-1 inactivation explains, at least in part, the molecular mechanism for β-cell glucose toxicity found in diabetes.

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Published

2023-08-13

How to Cite

Pleiotropic Roles of PDX-1 in the Pancreas . (2023). The Review of Diabetic Studies , 4(4). https://diabeticstudies.org/index.php/RDS/article/view/331

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