The ADA Forsyth Institute, 245 First Street, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA.
The ADA Forsyth Institute, 245 First Street, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA; Department of Biochemistry, Tokyo Dental College, Tokyo, Japan.
Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Res. 2024 Oct;1871(7):119817. doi: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2024.119817. Epub 2024 Aug 17.
Intermittent fasting exerts a profound beneficial influence on a spectrum of diseases through various mechanisms including regulation of immune responses, elimination of senescent- and pathogenic cells and improvement of stem cell-based tissue regeneration in a disease- and tissue-dependent manner. Our previous study demonstrated that alternate-day fasting (ADF) led to alleviation of xerostomia and sialadenitis in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice, a well-defined model of Sjögren's syndrome (SS). This present study delved into the previously unexplored impacts of ADF in this disease setting and revealed that ADF increases the proportion of salivary gland stem cells (SGSCs), defined as the EpCAM cell population among the lineage marker negative submandibular gland (SMG) cells. Furthermore, ADF downregulated the expression of p16, a cellular senescence marker, which was concomitant with increased apoptosis and decreased expression and activity of NLRP3 inflammasomes in the SMGs, particularly in the SGSC-residing ductal compartments. RNA-sequencing analysis of purified SGSCs from NOD mice revealed that the significantly downregulated genes by ADF were mainly associated with sugar metabolism, amino acid biosynthetic process and MAPK signaling pathway, whereas the significantly upregulated genes related to fatty acid metabolic processes, among others. Collectively, these findings indicate that ADF increases the SGSC proportion, accompanied by a modulation of the SGSC property and a switch from sugar- to fatty acid-based metabolism. These findings lay the foundation for further investigation into the functionality of SGSCs influenced by ADF and shed light on the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which ADF exerts beneficial actions on salivary gland restoration in SS.
间歇性禁食通过多种机制对一系列疾病产生深远的有益影响,包括调节免疫反应、清除衰老和致病细胞以及改善基于干细胞的组织再生,具体方式取决于疾病和组织。我们之前的研究表明,隔日禁食(ADF)可缓解非肥胖型糖尿病(NOD)小鼠的口干症和唾液腺炎,这是干燥综合征(SS)的一个明确模型。本研究深入探讨了 ADF 在这种疾病环境中的先前未探索的影响,并揭示了 ADF 增加唾液腺干细胞(SGSCs)的比例,其定义为谱系标记阴性颌下腺(SMG)细胞中的 EpCAM 细胞群。此外,ADF 下调了细胞衰老标志物 p16 的表达,这与 SMG 中 NLRP3 炎性小体的凋亡增加、表达和活性降低有关,特别是在 SGSC 所在的导管区室中。从 NOD 小鼠纯化的 SGSCs 的 RNA 测序分析表明,ADF 显著下调的基因主要与糖代谢、氨基酸生物合成过程和 MAPK 信号通路有关,而上调的基因则与脂肪酸代谢过程有关。总之,这些发现表明 ADF 增加了 SGSC 的比例,同时调节了 SGSC 的特性,并从糖基代谢转变为基于脂肪酸的代谢。这些发现为进一步研究 ADF 对 SGSCs 功能的影响奠定了基础,并阐明了 ADF 对 SS 唾液腺恢复产生有益作用的细胞和分子机制。