What the study found
The study found that pancreatic beta cells show progressive age-related DNA methylation changes, including demethylation at regions linked to beta cell identity and function genes. In type 2 diabetes (T2D), beta cells showed further demethylation compared with healthy controls, while alpha cells did not show the same pattern.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors suggest these DNA methylation changes may reflect how beta cells adapt over time to rising metabolic demand. They conclude that the faster remodeling seen in T2D may represent a compensatory response that is not sufficient when insulin resistance persists.
What the researchers tested
The researchers mapped genome-wide DNA methylation patterns using cell-type-specific methylome data from the Human Pancreas Analysis Program. They compared healthy donors across age and examined beta cells and alpha cells, including beta cells from people with T2D.
What worked and what didn't
In healthy donors, beta cells showed progressive age-related demethylation, especially in cis-regulatory elements, which are DNA regions that help control nearby genes. Alpha cells showed the opposite trend, with subtle age-related hypermethylation, meaning increased DNA methylation.
What to keep in mind
The abstract describes associations in DNA methylation patterns, not direct functional tests of cause and effect. No additional limitations are described in the available summary.
Key points
- Healthy beta cells showed progressive age-related DNA demethylation.
- The demethylation was enriched in cis-regulatory elements at beta cell identity and function genes.
- Alpha cells showed the opposite pattern: subtle age-related hypermethylation.
- T2D beta cells showed further demethylation compared with healthy controls.
- The authors suggest beta cell DNA methylation remodelling reflects long-term adaptation to metabolic demand.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Beta cell DNA methylation changes with age and in T2D
- Authors:
- Elisabetta Manduchi, Hélène C. Descamps, Jinping Liu, Jonathan Schug, Tong Da, Deeksha Lahori, Hilana El‐Mekkoussi, Michelle Lee, Eseye Feleke, Diana Bernstein, C Y Liu, Ali Naji, Benjamin Gläser, Klaus H. Kaestner, Dana Avrahami
- Institutions:
- Pancreas Centre (Canada), University of Pennsylvania, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Hadassah Medical Center
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-24
- OpenAlex record:
- View
Get the weekly research newsletter
Stay current with peer-reviewed research without reading academic papers — one filtered digest, every Friday.


