Transdifferentiation of pancreatic ductal cells to endocrine β-cells
- 21 May 2008
- journal article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Society Transactions
- Vol. 36 (3) , 353-356
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bst0360353
Abstract
The regenerative process in the pancreas is of particular interest, since diabetes, whether Type 1 or Type 2, results from an inadequate amount of insulin-producing beta-cells. Islet neogenesis, or the formation of new islets, seen as budding of hormone-positive cells from the ductal epithelium, has long been considered to be one of the mechanisms of normal islet growth after birth and in regeneration, and suggested the presence of pancreatic stem cells. Results from the rat regeneration model of partial pancreatectomy led us to hypothesize that differentiated pancreatic ductal cells were the pancreatic progenitors after birth, and that with replication they regressed to a less differentiated phenotype and then could differentiate to form new acini and islets. There are numerous supportive results for this hypothesis of neogenesis, including the ability of purified primary human ducts to form insulin-positive cells budding from ducts. However, to rigorously test this hypothesis, we took a direct approach of genetically marking ductal cells using CAII (carbonic anhydrase II) as a duct-cell-specific promoter to drive Cre recombinase in lineage-tracing experiments using the Cre-Lox system. We show that CAII-expressing pancreatic cells act as progenitors that give rise to both new islets and acini after birth and after injury (ductal ligation). This identification of a differentiated pancreatic cell type as an in vivo progenitor for all differentiated pancreatic cell types has implications for a potential expandable source for new islets for replenishment therapy for diabetes either in vivo or ex vivo.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differentiation of Affinity-Purified Human Pancreatic Duct Cells to β-CellsDiabetes, 2007
- Preexisting pancreatic acinar cells contribute to acinar cell, but not islet β cell, regenerationJournal of Clinical Investigation, 2007
- Timing and expression pattern of carbonic anhydrase II in pancreasDevelopmental Dynamics, 2006
- The homeodomain protein PDX1 is required at mid-pancreatic development for the formation of the exocrine pancreasDevelopmental Biology, 2005
- Pancreatic epithelial plasticity mediated by acinar cell transdifferentiation and generation of nestin-positive intermediatesDevelopment, 2005
- Recapitulation of elements of embryonic development in adult mouse pancreatic regenerationGastroenterology, 2005
- The pancreatic ductal epithelium serves as a potential pool of progenitor cellsPediatric Diabetes, 2004
- Exendin‐4 differentiation of a human pancreatic duct cell line into endocrine cells: Involvement of PDX‐1 and HNF3β transcription factorsJournal of Cellular Physiology, 2002
- Betacellulin and activin A coordinately convert amylase-secreting pancreatic AR42J cells into insulin-secreting cells.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1996
- Pancreatic gastrin stimulates islet differentiation of transforming growth factor alpha-induced ductular precursor cells.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1993