Diabetes, Vol 49, Issue 6 936-944, Copyright © 2000 by American Diabetes Association
Expression and role of laminin-1 in mouse pancreatic organogenesis
CA Crisera, AS Kadison, GD Breslow, TS Maldonado, MT Longaker and GK Gittes
Children's Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, Missouri 64108-4698, USA.
Previous studies have suggested that basement membrane alone may induce
ductal differentiation and morphogenesis in the undifferentiated embryonic
pancreas. The mechanism by which this induction occurs has not been
investigated. Studies of other organ systems such as the lungs and mammary
glands, where differentiation has been shown to be induced by basement
membrane, have suggested a major role for laminin as a mediator of ductal
or tubular morphogenesis and differentiation. We first defined the ontogeny
of laminin-1 in the developing mouse pancreas. To determine the specific
role of basement membrane laminin in pancreatic ductal morphogenesis and
differentiation, we microdissected 11-day mouse embryonic pancreatic
epithelium free from its surrounding mesenchyme and then suspended the
explants in a 3-dimensional organ culture to allow us to assay cell
differentiation and morphogenesis. When the pancreatic epithelium buds off
the foregut endoderm, the pancreatic mesenchyme diffusely expresses
laminin-1. This laminin subsequently organizes to the interface between the
epithelium and the mesenchyme by E12.5. As gestation progresses, epithelial
cells in direct contact with laminin-1 seem to differentiate into ducts and
acini, whereas those spared intimate contact with laminin-1 appeared to
organize into islets. Although basement membrane gel could induce
pancreatic ductal morphogenesis of embryonic pancreatic epithelium, this
induction was blocked when we added neutralizing antibodies against any of
the following: 1) laminin (specifically laminin-1), 2) the "cross-region"
of laminin-1, and 3) the alpha6 moiety of the integrin receptor, which is
known to bind laminins. Immunohistochemistry, however, showed that
pancreatic duct cell-specific differentiation (carbonic anhydrase II)
without ductal morphogenesis was still present, despite the blockage of
duct morphogenesis by the anti-laminin-1 neutralizing antibodies.
Interestingly, there appeared to be a decrease in carbonic anhydrase II
expression over time when the epithelia were grown in a collagen gel,
rather than in a basement membrane gel. The pattern of laminin-1 expression
in the embryonic pancreas supports the conclusion that laminin-1 is
important in the induction of exocrine (ducts and acini) differentiation in
the pancreas. Furthermore, our data demonstrate that 1) pancreatic ductal
morphogenesis appears to require basement membrane laminin-1 and an
alpha6-containing integrin receptor; 2) the cross-region of basement
membrane laminin is a biologically active locus of the laminin molecule
necessary for pancreatic ductal morphogenesis; 3) duct-specific
cytodifferentiation, in the form of carbonic anhydrase II expression, is
not necessarily coupled to duct morphogenesis; and 4) the basement membrane
gel may contain components (e.g., growth factors) other than laminin-1 that
can sustain both carbonic anhydrase II expression and, possibly, the
capacity to form ducts, despite the absence of duct structures.