RESUMO
Dietary fructose, especially in the context of a high-fat western diet, has been linked to type 2 diabetes. Although the effect of fructose on liver metabolism has been extensively studied, a significant portion of the fructose is first metabolized in the small intestine. Here, we report that dietary fat enhances intestinal fructose metabolism, which releases glycerate into the blood. Chronic high systemic glycerate levels induce glucose intolerance by slowly damaging pancreatic islet cells and reducing islet sizes. Our findings provide a link between dietary fructose and diabetes that is modulated by dietary fat.
Assuntos
Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2 , Intolerância à Glucose , Ilhotas Pancreáticas , Glicemia , Dieta Hiperlipídica/efeitos adversos , Gorduras na Dieta/farmacologia , Frutose/metabolismo , Glucose/metabolismo , Intolerância à Glucose/metabolismo , Humanos , Insulina/metabolismo , Ilhotas Pancreáticas/metabolismoRESUMO
Embryonic development is a complex process that is unamenable to direct observation. In this study, we implanted a window to the mouse uterus to visualize the developing embryo from embryonic day 9.5 to birth. This removable intravital window allowed manipulation and high-resolution imaging. In live mouse embryos, we observed transient neurotransmission and early vascularization of neural crest cell (NCC)-derived perivascular cells in the brain, autophagy in the retina, viral gene delivery, and chemical diffusion through the placenta. We combined the imaging window with in utero electroporation to label and track cell division and movement within embryos and observed that clusters of mouse NCC-derived cells expanded in interspecies chimeras, whereas adjacent human donor NCC-derived cells shrank. This technique can be combined with various tissue manipulation and microscopy methods to study the processes of development at unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution.
Assuntos
Embrião de Mamíferos/citologia , Embrião de Mamíferos/fisiologia , Desenvolvimento Embrionário , Microscopia Intravital/métodos , Crista Neural , Animais , Encéfalo/embriologia , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Divisão Celular , Movimento Celular , Quimera/embriologia , Quimera/fisiologia , Eletroporação , Feminino , Técnicas de Transferência de Genes , Camundongos , Camundongos Transgênicos , Neovascularização Fisiológica , Crista Neural/irrigação sanguínea , Crista Neural/citologia , Crista Neural/embriologia , Placenta/fisiologia , Gravidez , Retina/embriologia , Retina/fisiologia , Transmissão Sináptica , ÚteroRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Mechanical and biophysical properties of the cellular microenvironment regulate cell fate decisions. Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) fate is influenced by past mechanical dosing (memory), but the mechanisms underlying this process have not yet been well defined. We have yet to understand how memory affects specific cell fate decisions, such as the differentiation of MSCs into neurons, adipocytes, myocytes, and osteoblasts. RESULTS: We study a minimal gene regulatory network permissive of multi-lineage MSC differentiation into four cell fates. We present a continuous model that is able to describe the cell fate transitions that occur during differentiation, and analyze its dynamics with tools from multistability, bifurcation, and cell fate landscape analysis, and via stochastic simulation. Whereas experimentally, memory has only been observed during osteogenic differentiation, this model predicts that memory regions can exist for each of the four MSC-derived cell lineages. We can predict the substrate stiffness ranges over which memory drives differentiation; these are directly testable in an experimental setting. Furthermore, we quantitatively predict how substrate stiffness and culture duration co-regulate the fate of a stem cell, and we find that the feedbacks from the differentiating MSC onto its substrate are critical to preserve mechanical memory. Strikingly, we show that re-seeding MSCs onto a sufficiently soft substrate increases the number of cell fates accessible. CONCLUSIONS: Control of MSC differentiation is crucial for the success of much-lauded regenerative therapies based on MSCs. We have predicted new memory regions that will directly impact this control, and have quantified the size of the memory region for osteoblasts, as well as the co-regulatory effects on cell fates of substrate stiffness and culture duration. Taken together, these results can be used to develop novel strategies to better control the fates of MSCs in vitro and following transplantation.