Compensatory Response by Late Embryonic Tubular Epithelium to the Reduction in Pancreatic Progenitors.

Early in pancreatic development, epithelial cells of pancreatic buds function as primary multipotent progenitor cells (1°MPC) that specify all three pancreatic cell lineages, i.e., endocrine, acinar and duct. Bipotent "Trunk" progenitors derived from 1°MPC are implicated in directly regula...

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Main Authors: Wataru Nishimura, Archana Kapoor, Ilham El Khattabi, Wanzhu Jin, Kazuki Yasuda, Susan Bonner-Weir, Arun Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4635002?pdf=render
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author Wataru Nishimura
Archana Kapoor
Ilham El Khattabi
Wanzhu Jin
Kazuki Yasuda
Susan Bonner-Weir
Arun Sharma
author_facet Wataru Nishimura
Archana Kapoor
Ilham El Khattabi
Wanzhu Jin
Kazuki Yasuda
Susan Bonner-Weir
Arun Sharma
author_sort Wataru Nishimura
collection DOAJ
description Early in pancreatic development, epithelial cells of pancreatic buds function as primary multipotent progenitor cells (1°MPC) that specify all three pancreatic cell lineages, i.e., endocrine, acinar and duct. Bipotent "Trunk" progenitors derived from 1°MPC are implicated in directly regulating the specification of endocrine progenitors. It is unclear if this specification process is initiated in the 1°MPC where some 1°MPC become competent for later specification of endocrine progenitors. Previously we reported that in Pdx1tTA/+;tetOMafA (bigenic) mice inducing expression of transcription factor MafA in Pdx1-expressing (Pdx1+) cells throughout embryonic development inhibited the proliferation and differentiation of 1°MPC cells, resulting in reduced pancreatic mass and endocrine cells by embryonic day (E) 17.5. Induction of the transgene only until E12.5 in Pdx1+ 1°MPC was sufficient for this inhibition of endocrine cells and pancreatic mass at E17.5. However, by birth (P0), as we now report, such bigenic pups had significantly increased pancreatic and endocrine volumes with endocrine clusters containing all pancreatic endocrine cell types. The increase in endocrine cells resulted from a higher proliferation of tubular epithelial cells expressing the progenitor marker Glut2 in E17.5 bigenic embryos and increased number of Neurog3-expressing cells at E19.5. A BrdU-labeling study demonstrated that inhibiting proliferation of 1°MPC by forced MafA-expression did not lead to retention of those progenitors in E17.5 tubular epithelium. Our data suggest that the forced MafA expression in the 1°MPC inhibits their competency to specify endocrine progenitors only until E17.5, and after that compensatory proliferation of tubular epithelium gives rise to a distinct pool of endocrine progenitors. Thus, these bigenic mice provide a novel way to characterize the competency of 1°MPC for their ability to specify endocrine progenitors, a critical limitation in our understanding of endocrine differentiation.
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spelling doaj.art-e10f0eefb4ee46629e5b2ae7dc92dfd02022-12-21T19:24:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011011e014228610.1371/journal.pone.0142286Compensatory Response by Late Embryonic Tubular Epithelium to the Reduction in Pancreatic Progenitors.Wataru NishimuraArchana KapoorIlham El KhattabiWanzhu JinKazuki YasudaSusan Bonner-WeirArun SharmaEarly in pancreatic development, epithelial cells of pancreatic buds function as primary multipotent progenitor cells (1°MPC) that specify all three pancreatic cell lineages, i.e., endocrine, acinar and duct. Bipotent "Trunk" progenitors derived from 1°MPC are implicated in directly regulating the specification of endocrine progenitors. It is unclear if this specification process is initiated in the 1°MPC where some 1°MPC become competent for later specification of endocrine progenitors. Previously we reported that in Pdx1tTA/+;tetOMafA (bigenic) mice inducing expression of transcription factor MafA in Pdx1-expressing (Pdx1+) cells throughout embryonic development inhibited the proliferation and differentiation of 1°MPC cells, resulting in reduced pancreatic mass and endocrine cells by embryonic day (E) 17.5. Induction of the transgene only until E12.5 in Pdx1+ 1°MPC was sufficient for this inhibition of endocrine cells and pancreatic mass at E17.5. However, by birth (P0), as we now report, such bigenic pups had significantly increased pancreatic and endocrine volumes with endocrine clusters containing all pancreatic endocrine cell types. The increase in endocrine cells resulted from a higher proliferation of tubular epithelial cells expressing the progenitor marker Glut2 in E17.5 bigenic embryos and increased number of Neurog3-expressing cells at E19.5. A BrdU-labeling study demonstrated that inhibiting proliferation of 1°MPC by forced MafA-expression did not lead to retention of those progenitors in E17.5 tubular epithelium. Our data suggest that the forced MafA expression in the 1°MPC inhibits their competency to specify endocrine progenitors only until E17.5, and after that compensatory proliferation of tubular epithelium gives rise to a distinct pool of endocrine progenitors. Thus, these bigenic mice provide a novel way to characterize the competency of 1°MPC for their ability to specify endocrine progenitors, a critical limitation in our understanding of endocrine differentiation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4635002?pdf=render
spellingShingle Wataru Nishimura
Archana Kapoor
Ilham El Khattabi
Wanzhu Jin
Kazuki Yasuda
Susan Bonner-Weir
Arun Sharma
Compensatory Response by Late Embryonic Tubular Epithelium to the Reduction in Pancreatic Progenitors.
PLoS ONE
title Compensatory Response by Late Embryonic Tubular Epithelium to the Reduction in Pancreatic Progenitors.
title_full Compensatory Response by Late Embryonic Tubular Epithelium to the Reduction in Pancreatic Progenitors.
title_fullStr Compensatory Response by Late Embryonic Tubular Epithelium to the Reduction in Pancreatic Progenitors.
title_full_unstemmed Compensatory Response by Late Embryonic Tubular Epithelium to the Reduction in Pancreatic Progenitors.
title_short Compensatory Response by Late Embryonic Tubular Epithelium to the Reduction in Pancreatic Progenitors.
title_sort compensatory response by late embryonic tubular epithelium to the reduction in pancreatic progenitors
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4635002?pdf=render
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