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    Diabetologia. 2004 Mar;47(3):470-7. Epub 2004 Feb 14.

    Stable and functional regeneration of pancreatic beta-cell population in nSTZ-rats treated with tungstate.

    Source

    Department of Medicine, Hospital Clínic/Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.

    Abstract

    AIMS/HYPOTHESIS:

    Sodium tungstate has recently emerged as an effective oral treatment for diabetes. We examined the effects of tungstate administration in the beta-cell mass of the pancreas as well as its therapeutic potential.

    METHODS:

    Sodium tungstate was administered via drinking water to healthy and neonatal streptozotocin (nSTZ)-diabetic rats for one month. The pancreas from each rat was removed and morphometric and immunocytochemical studies were carried out. The molecular mechanism of tungstate's action was also studied.

    RESULTS:

    In nSTZ rats administration of this compound normalised glycaemia, and increased insulinaemia and islet insulin content. Blood glucose concentrations were normalised as early as on day 4 of treatment, and tungstate treatment produced a partial recovery of beta-cell mass. The rats remained normoglycaemic after tungstate withdrawal. Morphometric studies showed that the increase in beta-cell mass was not due to beta-cell hypertrophy but to hyperplasia, with an increase in islet density in treated diabetic rats. Tungstate treatment increased extra-islet beta-cell replication without modifying intra-islet beta-cell replication rates. Moreover, the treatment induced increases in insulin-positive cells located close to ducts; and in PDX-1 positive cells scattered in the exocrine tissue, suggesting active neogenesis. In islets from treated diabetic rats, tungstate is able to increase the phosphorylation state of PDX-1 through the activation of p38.

    CONCLUSION/INTERPRETATION:

    These observations indicate that tungstate treatment is able to regenerate a stable, functional pancreatic beta-cell population which leads to and maintains normoglycaemia.

    PMID:
    14968293
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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