HNF1A-MODY, the most common monogenic diabetes, exhibits progressive β cell dysfunction, but existing mouse models fail to recapitulate human disease progression, limiting understanding of pathogenic mechanisms. We developed mice with heterozygous deletion of the Hnf1a transactivation domain (Hnf1a+/Δe4-10) to model human HNF1A haploinsufficiency, conducted cross-sectional metabolic characterization, and validated our findings in HNF1A-deficient human islets. Unlike previous models, Hnf1a+/Δe4-10 mice successfully recapitulated temporal HNF1A-MODY progression. Male mice developed sequential pathophysiology: early insulin resistance in young adults (7 weeks), followed by testosterone deficiency and fasting hyperglycemia in adult mice (10 weeks). Glucose intolerance emerged in middle-aged mice (30 weeks), progressing to multi-organ dysfunction in aged mice (44–70 weeks), characterized by elevated hepatic gluconeogenesis, impaired renal glucose handling, and hepatic steatosis/fibrosis. This dual pathophysiology involving β cell dysfunction and peripheral insulin resistance was associated with dysregulated hormone secretion from both α and β cells in aged mice (40–70 weeks). Human islet studies with HNF1A knockdown confirmed translational relevance, demonstrating reduced SGLT2 protein expression and inappropriate glucagon and insulin secretion. This work established a physiologically relevant HNF1A-MODY model, identified early insulin resistance as a key mechanism triggering hormonal dysfunction, and revealed HNF1A’s role in multi-organ pathophysiology beyond traditional β cell dysfunction.
Isaline Louvet, Ana Acosta-Montalvo, Chiara Saponaro, Maria Moreno-Lopez, Sana Douffi, Abdelkrim El Karchaoui, Gianni Pasquetti, Julien Thevenet, Nathalie Delalleau, Valery Gmyr, Paolo Giacobini, Stéphanie Espiard, Julie Kerr-Conte, François Pattou, Adrian Liston, Caroline Bonner
The Editorial Board will only consider comments that are deemed relevant and of interest to readers. The Journal will not post data that have not been subjected to peer review; or a comment that is essentially a reiteration of another comment.