Hydrolysed casein diet protects BB rats from developing diabetes by promoting islet neogenesis
- PMID: 11090239
- DOI: 10.1006/jaut.2000.0453
Hydrolysed casein diet protects BB rats from developing diabetes by promoting islet neogenesis
Abstract
Feeding diabetes-prone BioBreeding (BBdp) rats a hydrolysed-casein (HC)-based semi-purified diet results in two-to-three-fold fewer diabetes cases compared with feeding cereal-based diets such as NIH-07 (NIH). We showed previously that young NIH-fed BBdp rats had decreased islet area at a time when classic insulitis was minimal. Rats fed an HC diet maintained near normal islet area followed 3-4 weeks later by a deviation of the pancreas cytokine pattern from Th1 to Th2/Th3. This finding raised the possibility that BBdp rats were more susceptible to diet-induced changes in islet homeostasis. To investigate this possibility further, BBdp rats were fed an NIH or HC diet from days 23 to 45. Bouin's fixed sections of pancreas were stained with H & E or antibodies for insulin and glucagon. Cell proliferation nuclear antigen (PCNA) was used as a marker of cell proliferation and cells were stained for putative markers of islet neogenesis, cytokeratin 20 (CK20) and Bcl-2. Apoptotic bodies were recognized by morphological features and by TUNEL-positive staining. BBdp rats fed an HC diet had a significantly higher beta-cell fraction than rats fed NIH, whereas alpha-cell fraction and beta-cell size were not affected by diet or rat type. Apoptotic bodies of beta-cells were rare and unaffected by diet. The number of PCNA(+)beta-cells was not affected by diet. CK20 expression was localized in the ductular system and at the periphery of islets in rats aged 7 and 45 days. There were more CK20(+)islets in BBdp rats fed NIH than in those fed HC but the CK20 area fraction was unaffected by diet. Bcl-2 expression was scattered among ducts and central acinar cells. The number of extra-islet insulin(+)and glucagon(+)clusters (<four cells) was significantly higher in animals fed the HC diet compared with those fed NIH. Most of the insulin(+)clusters were also homeodomain-containing transcription factor pancreas duodenum homeobox gene-1 (PDX-1) positive. Glucagon(+)/PDX-1(+)clusters were rarely found. These data are consistent with a shift in pancreas homeostasis that maintains islet cell mass by increased islet neogenesis, a process that was enhanced in animals fed a diabetes-retardant diet.
Copyright 2000 Academic Press.
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