Literature DB >> 21208992

Genetic inducible fate mapping in larval zebrafish reveals origins of adult insulin-producing β-cells.

Yiyun Wang1, Meritxell Rovira, Shamila Yusuff, Michael J Parsons.   

Abstract

The Notch-signaling pathway is known to be fundamental in controlling pancreas differentiation. We now report on using Cre-based fate mapping to indelibly label pancreatic Notch-responsive cells (PNCs) at larval stages and follow their fate in the adult pancreas. We show that the PNCs represent a population of progenitors that can differentiate to multiple lineages, including adult ductal cells, centroacinar cells (CACs) and endocrine cells. These endocrine cells include the insulin-producing β-cells. CACs are a functional component of the exocrine pancreas; however, our fate-mapping results indicate that CACs are more closely related to endocrine cells by lineage as they share a common progenitor. The majority of the exocrine pancreas consists of the secretory acinar cells; however, we only detect a very limited contribution of PNCs to acinar cells. To explain this observation we re-examined early events in pancreas formation. The pancreatic anlage that gives rise to the exocrine pancreas is located in the ventral gut endoderm (called the ventral bud). Ptf1a is a gene required for exocrine pancreas development and is first expressed as the ventral bud forms. We used transgenic marker lines to observe both the domain of cells expressing ptf1a and cells responding to Notch signaling. We do not detect any overlap in expression and demonstrate that the ventral bud consists of two cell populations: a ptf1-expressing domain and a Notch-responsive progenitor core. As pancreas organogenesis continues, the ventral bud derived PNCs align along the duct, remain multipotent and later in development differentiate to form secondary islets, ducts and CACs.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21208992      PMCID: PMC3026409          DOI: 10.1242/dev.059097

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Development        ISSN: 0950-1991            Impact factor:   6.868


  47 in total

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  57 in total

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7.  Retinoic acid plays an evolutionarily conserved and biphasic role in pancreas development.

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8.  Sox9b is a mediator of retinoic acid signaling restricting endocrine progenitor differentiation.

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9.  Centroacinar Cells Are Progenitors That Contribute to Endocrine Pancreas Regeneration.

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10.  Antagonistic interaction between Wnt and Notch activity modulates the regenerative capacity of a zebrafish fibrotic liver model.

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