[PDF][PDF] Preserved DNA damage checkpoint pathway protects against complications in long-standing type 1 diabetes

S Bhatt, MK Gupta, M Khamaisi, R Martinez… - Cell metabolism, 2015 - cell.com
S Bhatt, MK Gupta, M Khamaisi, R Martinez, MA Gritsenko, BK Wagner, P Guye
Cell metabolism, 2015cell.com
The mechanisms underlying the development of complications in type 1 diabetes (T1D) are
poorly understood. Disease modeling of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from patients
with longstanding T1D (disease duration≥ 50 years) with severe (Medalist+ C) or absent to
mild complications (Medalist− C) revealed impaired growth, reprogramming, and
differentiation in Medalist+ C. Genomics and proteomics analyses suggested differential
regulation of DNA damage checkpoint proteins favoring protection from cellular apoptosis in …
Summary
The mechanisms underlying the development of complications in type 1 diabetes (T1D) are poorly understood. Disease modeling of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from patients with longstanding T1D (disease duration ≥ 50 years) with severe (Medalist +C) or absent to mild complications (Medalist −C) revealed impaired growth, reprogramming, and differentiation in Medalist +C. Genomics and proteomics analyses suggested differential regulation of DNA damage checkpoint proteins favoring protection from cellular apoptosis in Medalist −C. In silico analyses showed altered expression patterns of DNA damage checkpoint factors among the Medalist groups to be targets of miR200, whose expression was significantly elevated in Medalist +C serum. Notably, neurons differentiated from Medalist +C iPSCs exhibited enhanced susceptibility to genotoxic stress that worsened upon miR200 overexpression. Furthermore, knockdown of miR200 in Medalist +C fibroblasts and iPSCs rescued checkpoint protein expression and reduced DNA damage. We propose miR200-regulated DNA damage checkpoint pathway as a potential therapeutic target for treating complications of diabetes.
cell.com