First quantitative high-throughput screen in zebrafish identifies novel pathways for increasing pancreatic β-cell mass

Autor/a

Wang, Guangliang

Rajpurohit, Surendra K.

Delaspre, Fabien

Walker, Steven L.

White, David T.

Ceasrine, Alexis

Kuruvilla, Rejji

Li, Ruo-jing

Shim, Joong S.

Liu, Jun O.

Parsons, Michael J.

Mumm, Jeff S.

Fecha de publicación

2020-09-07T07:45:08Z

2020-09-07T07:45:08Z

2015-07-28

2020-09-07T07:45:09Z



Resumen

Whole-organism chemical screening can circumvent bottlenecks that impede drug discovery. However, in vivo screens have not attained throughput capacities possible with in vitro assays. We therefore developed a method enabling in vivo high-throughput screening (HTS) in zebrafish, termed automated reporter quantification in vivo (ARQiv). In this study, ARQiv was combined with robotics to fully actualize whole-organism HTS (ARQiv-HTS). In a primary screen, this platform quantified cell-specific fluorescent reporters in >500,000 transgenic zebrafish larvae to identify FDAapproved (Federal Drug Administration) drugs that increased the number of insulin-producing β cells in the pancreas. 24 drugs were confirmed as inducers of endocrine differentiation and/or stimulators of β-cell proliferation. Further, we discovered novel roles for NF-κB signaling in regulating endocrine differentiation and for serotonergic signaling in selectively stimulating β-cell proliferation. These studies demonstrate the power of ARQiv-HTS for drug discovery and provide unique insights into signaling pathways controlling β-cell mass, potential therapeutic targets for treating diabetes.


This work was supported by the NIDDK, NIH (1RC4DK090816). Other support was as follows: GW and MJP—Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (17-2012-408), and the NIH (R01DK080730); FD -MSCRF 2013 Postdoctoral Fellowship; SKR and JSM—Diabetic Complications Consortium, NIDDK, NIH (12GHSU209). JSS—Science and Technology Development Fund (FDCT) of Macau SAR (FDCT/119/2013/A3); RK—NINDS (R01 NS073751); JOL—FAMRI, ITCR and Prostate Cancer Foundation. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.

Tipo de documento

Artículo
Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

Citologia; Biologia del desenvolupament; Diabetis; Cèl·lules B

Publicado por

eLife Sciences Publications

Documentos relacionados

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.08261

eLife, 2015, vol. 4, p. e08261

Derechos

cc-by (c) Wang, Guangliang et al., 2015

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es

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