cLoss of pancreatic -cell maturity occurs in diabetes and insulinomas. Although both physiological and pathological stresses are known to promote -cell dedifferentiation, little is known about the molecules involved in this process. Here we demonstrate that activinB, a transforming growth factor  (TGF-)-related ligand, is upregulated during tumorigenesis and drives the loss of insulin expression and -cell maturity in a mouse insulinoma model. Our data further identify Pax4 as a previously unknown activinB target and potent contributor to the observed -cell dedifferentiation. More importantly, using compound mutant mice, we found that deleting activinB expression abolishes tumor -cell dedifferentiation and, surprisingly, increases survival without significantly affecting tumor growth. Hence, this work reveals an unexpected role for activinB in the loss of -cell maturity, islet plasticity, and progression of insulinoma through its participation in -cell dedifferentiation.
Loss of maturity and acquisition of embryonic traits are wellestablished paradigms that contribute to tumor heterogeneity and metastasis (1, 2). Endocrine tumors that develop from pancreatic islet cells are highly heterogeneous (3). Although poorly differentiated endocrine tumors of the pancreas exist, the cause and contribution of -cell dedifferentiation in the initiation and progression of those lesions remain undetermined. Loss of insulin expression has been observed in transgenic mouse models of insulinoma, supporting the existence of a mechanism that reverts the differentiated state of mature  cells in -cell tumors (4, 5). Recently, Landsman et al. demonstrated that elevated Hedgehog/ Gli signaling in  cells alters their identity and leads to the development of undifferentiated endocrine pancreatic tumors (6). Therefore, the participation of -cell dedifferentiation in adult pancreatic pathologies such as islet tumors underscores the need to identify the autocrine factors controlling these mechanisms.While the characterization of signals that regulate -cell development and regeneration is the focus of intense work (7), less is known about mechanisms and molecules that control the differentiation state of mature adult  cells under pathological conditions. The phenomenon of -cell dedifferentiation, characterized by a loss of expression of key -cell genes, such as those encoding insulin, glucose transporter 2 (Glut2), and transcription factors associated with the cells' mature phenotype, was first reported in mouse and recently confirmed in cultured human islets in the absence of any pathological context (8-10). Further evidence has confirmed that the differentiated state of mature adult  cells is not permanent and is lost in response to signals such as oxidative stress and changes in transcriptional profile (11-13). The contribution of -cell dedifferentiation to pathological conditions in vivo is also supported by recent work suggesting that -cell dedifferentiation caused by FoxO1 disruption underlies -cell failure in type...