A human and mouse subpopulation of senescent β-cells induces pathologic dysfunction through targetable paracrine signaling

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Abstract

Cellular senescence is a stress response mechanism marked by irreversible growth arrest, upregulation of antiapoptotic pathways, loss of cellular function, and remodelling of the cellular secretory profile. In both humans and mice, pancreatic β-cells undergo senescence with age and insulin resistance. Targeted removal of senescent cells in mouse models of diabetes improves glucose homeostasis, demonstrating the role β-cell senescence in diabetes progression. In contrast, β-cell senescence also promotes immune surveillance, promoting β-cell survival and function. Thus, a better understanding of senescent cells’ phenotypic and functional heterogeneity is needed to develop effective therapeutic strategies.

Herein, we show that subpopulations of senescent β-cells in mice and humans, which were identified through the expression of Cdkn1a (encoding p21 Cip1 ) and Cdkn2a (encoding p16 Ink4a ) by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), flow cytometry, spatial transcriptomics, and spatial proteomics, exhibit distinct transcriptional and functional identities. The predominant senescent β-cell subpopulation expressed Cdkn1a and was characterized by a lack of glucose responsiveness, high basal insulin secretion, and transcription of canonical SASP factors. The SASP of Cdkn1a -expressing β-cells had non-cell autonomous effects on neighbouring cells. A subset of four SASP factors from Cdkn1a + cells was sufficient to induce secondary senescence and β-cell dysfunction in vitro . JAK inhibitors (JAK1/2 and JAK1/3) counteracted secondary senescence induction and restored β-cell function in high-fat diet-fed mice and human islets from donors with or without type 2 diabetes.

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