Silibinin's regulation of proliferation and collagen gene expressions of rat pancreatic β-cells cultured on types I and V collagen involves β-catenin nuclear translocation.

In this study, we report that the proliferation of INS-1 cells cultured on collagen I-coated dishes is enhanced, but it is inhibited on collagen V-coated dishes. Inhibitory proliferation on collagen V-coated is not due to apoptosis induction. Silibinin decreases hepatic glucose production and protects pancreatic β-cells, as a potential medicine for type II diabetes. Silibinin up-regulates the proliferation of cells cultured on both collagen I- and V-coated dishes. Collagen-coating regulates gene expression of collagen in a collagen type-related manner. Silibinin increases mRNA expression of collagen I in the cells on collagen I- and V-coated dishes; however, silibinin decreases collagen V mRNA expression on collagen I- and V-coated dishes. Collagen I-coating significantly enhances nuclear translocation of β-catenin, while collagen V-coating reduces it. Differential effects of silibinin on collagen I mRNA and collagen V mRNA can be accounted for by the finding that silibinin enhances nuclear translocation of β-catenin on both collagen I- and V- coated dishes, since phenomenologically nuclear translocation of β-catenin enhances collagen I mRNA but represses collagen V mRNA. These results demonstrate that nuclear translocation of β-catenin up-regulates proliferation and collagen I gene expression, whereas it down-regulates collagen V gene expression of INS-1 cells. Differential gene expressions of collagen I and V by nuclear β-catenin could be important for understanding f...
Source: Connective Tissue Research - Category: Research Tags: Connect Tissue Res Source Type: research