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Diabetes, Vol 49, Issue 2 225-232, Copyright © 2000 by American Diabetes Association
Early pattern of differentiation in the human pancreas
M Polak, L Bouchareb-Banaei, R Scharfmann and P Czernichow
Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale (INSERM) U457, Department of Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes, Hopital Robert Debre, Paris, France. michel.polak@rdb.ap-hop-paris.fr
In the early human embryonic/fetal pancreas, we studied 1) the ontogenetic
pattern of the endocrine cells and the evolution of the endocrine mass, and
2) the morphogenetic pattern of development and, more precisely, the
complex relationship of the epithelial mass with the surrounding
mesenchyme. We studied 15 pancreases between 7 and 11 weeks of development
(WD) by double immunohistochemistry. Epithelial cells in these pancreatic
anlage were detected by cytokeratin staining, and differentiated endocrine
cells were detected by insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, and pancreatic
polypeptide staining. Proliferation was quantified using a nuclear marker,
the Ki-67 antibody. At this early stage, the pancreas is made up of an
epithelial mass composed of central ducts intermingled with a loose
mesenchyme and peripheral ducts surrounded by a dense peripancreatic
mesenchyme. Hormone-containing cells appear in the epithelium at 8 WD.
Newly differentiated endocrine cells coexpress insulin, glucagon, and
somatostatin; endocrine differentiation starts within the central ducts of
the epithelial mass, at a distance from the dense peripancreatic
surrounding mesenchyme. The fraction of the primitive endocrine cells
undergoing proliferation is low (5% of the insulin cells at 8 WD, 3% at 11
WD), which is in favor of massive differentiation as the major mechanism
for increasing endocrine mass. By contrast, the nonendocrine epithelial
cells have a higher rate of proliferation; the epithelial cells in contact
with the dense peripancreatic surrounding mesenchyme show more
proliferation activity than those within the central part of the epithelial
mass (at 11 WD, labeling index: periphery 65% vs. center 15%, P <
0.001). In conclusion, the patterns of endocrine differentiation and
epithelial proliferation observed within the human pancreas early in
development suggest that the mesenchyme plays a role in these phenomena.

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Copyright © 2000 by the American Diabetes Association.
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