4.7 Article

Early pancreatic development requires the vertebrate Suppressor of Hairless (RBPJ) in the PTF1 bHLH complex

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 21, Issue 20, Pages 2629-2643

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gad.1575207

Keywords

Ptf1a; Rbpj; Notch signaling; basic helix-loop-helix; pancreas; acinar cell

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [U19 DK042502, R01 DK061220, DK61220, DK42502, P01 DK042502] Funding Source: Medline

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PTF1a is an unusual basic helix-loop-helix ( bHLH) transcription factor that is required for the development of the pancreas. We show that early in pancreatic development, active PTF1a requires interaction with RBPJ, the vertebrate Suppressor of Hairless, within a stable trimeric DNA-binding complex ( PTF1). Later, as acinar cell development begins, RBPJ is swapped for RBPJL, the constitutively active, pancreas-restricted paralog of RBPJ. Moreover, the Rbpjl gene is a direct target of the PTF1 complex: At the onset of acinar cell development when the Rbpjl gene is first induced, a PTF1 complex containing RBPJ is bound to the Rbpjl promoter. As development proceeds, RBPJL gradually replaces RBPJ in the PTF1 complex bound to Rbpjl and appears on the binding sites for the complex in the promoters of other acinar-specific genes, including those for the secretory digestive enzymes. A single amino acid change in PTF1a that eliminates its ability to bind RBPJ ( but does not affect its binding to RBPJL) causes pancreatic development to truncate at an immature stage, without the formation of acini or islets. These results indicate that the interaction between PTF1a and RBPJ is required for the early stage of pancreatic growth, morphogenesis, and lineage fate decisions. The defects in pancreatic development phenocopy those of Ptf1a-null embryos; thus, the first critical function of PTF1a is in the context of the PTF1 complex containing RBPJ. Action within an organ-specific transcription factor is a previously unknown function for RBPJ and is independent of its role in Notch signaling.

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