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Diabetes Publish Ahead of Print published online ahead of print December 10, 2007
DOI: 10.2337/db07-1362

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Original Research

Defining pancreatic endocrine precursors and their descendants

Peter White, Ph.D.1, Catherine Lee May, Ph.D.1,,2, Rodrigo N. Lamounier, M.D.1, John E. Brestelli, M.S.1, and Klaus H. Kaestner, Ph.D.1

1Department of Genetics and Institute for Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104. USA
2Department of Pathology, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Abramson Research Center, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104. USA

Objective: The global incidence of diabetes continues to increase. Cell replacement therapy and islet transplantation offer hope, especially for severely affected patients. Efforts to differentiate insulin producing β-cells from progenitor or stem cells require knowledge of the transcriptional programs that regulate the development of the endocrine pancreas.

Research Design and Methods: Differentiation toward the endocrine lineage is dependent on the transcription factor Neurogenin 3 (Neurog3; Ngn3). We utilize a Neurog3-EGFP knock-in mouse model to isolate endocrine progenitor cells from embryonic pancreata (E13.5 through E17.5). Using advanced genomic approaches we generate a comprehensive gene expression profile of these progenitors and their immediate descendants.

Results: A total of 1,029 genes were identified as being temporally regulated in the endocrine lineage during fetal development, 237 of which are transcriptional regulators. Through pathway analysis we have modeled regulatory networks involving these proteins which highlight the complex transcriptional hierarchy governing endocrine differentiation.

Conclusion: We have been able to accurately capture the gene expression profile of the pancreatic endocrine progenitors and their descendants. The list of temporally regulated genes identified in fetal endocrine precursors and their immediate descendants provides a novel and important resource for developmental biologists and diabetes researchers alike.


Correspondence: kaestner{at}mail.med.upenn.edu


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