4.8 Review

Generation and Regeneration of Cells of the Liver and Pancreas

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 322, Issue 5907, Pages 1490-1494

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1161431

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Funding

  1. NIH [R37 GM36477, U01 DK072503, P30CA06927, U01 DK072477, ROI DK05192]
  2. Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation [18508680-36749]

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Liver and pancreas progenitors develop from endoderm cells in the embryonic foregut. Shortly after their specification, liver and pancreas progenitors rapidly acquire markedly different cellular functions and regenerative capacities. These changes are elicited by inductive signals and genetic regulatory factors that are highly conserved among vertebrates. Interest in the development and regeneration of the organs has been fueled by the intense need for hepatocytes and pancreatic beta cells in the therapeutic treatment of liver failure and type I diabetes. Studies in diverse model organisms have revealed evolutionarily conserved inductive signals and transcription factor networks that elicit the differentiation of liver and pancreatic cells and provide guidance for how to promote hepatocyte and b cell differentiation from diverse stem and progenitor cell types.

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