4.4 Article

pdx-1 function is specifically required in embryonic cells to generate appropriate numbers of endocrine cell types and maintain glucose homeostasis

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 314, Issue 2, Pages 406-417

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2007.10.038

Keywords

pancreas; islet; diabetes; Cre-lox; lineage tracing

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA68485, P30 CA068485] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NICHD NIH HHS [P30 HD015052, HD15052, T32 HD007502] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NIDDK NIH HHS [U19 DK042502-17, U19 DK042502-12, U19 DK042502, U19 DK042502-16, U19 DK042502-18, U19 DK042502-13, DK20593, DK42502, P30 DK058404, P60 DK020593, DK58404, R01 DK042612, P01 DK042502, U19 DK042502-14, P01 DK042502-11, P01 DK042502-10, P30 DK020593, DK42612, U19 DK042502-15] Funding Source: Medline

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The pdy1 gene is essential for pancreatic organogenesis in humans and mice; pdx1 mutations have been identified in human diabetic patients. Specific inactivation of pdy1 in adult beta cells revealed that this gene is required for maintenance of mature beta cell function. In the following study, a Cre-lox strategy was used to remove pdx1 function specifically from embryonic beta cells beginning at late-gestation, prior to islet formation. Animals in which pdv1 is lost in insulin-producing cells during embryogenesis had elevated blood glucose levels at birth and were overtly diabetic by weaning. Neonatal and adult mutant islets showed a dramatic reduction in the number of insulin(+) cells and an increase in both glucagon(+) and somatostatin(+) cells. Lineage tracing revealed that excess glucagon(+) and somatostatin(+) cells did not arise by interconversion of endocrine cell types. Examination of mutant islets revealed a decrease in proliferation of insulin-producing cells just before birth and a concomitant increase in proliferation of glucagon-producing cells. We propose that pdx1 is required for proliferation and function of the 13 cells generated at late gestation, and that one function of normal cells is to inhibit the proliferation of other islet cell types, resulting in the appropriate numbers of the different endocrine cell types. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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