Improved Glucose Tolerance and Acinar Dysmorphogenesis by Targeted Expression of Transcription Factor PDX-1 to the Exocrine Pancreas
- R. Scott Heller1,
- Doris A. Stoffers2,
- Troels Bock5,
- Kirsten Svenstrup5,
- Jan Jensen1,
- Thomas Horn6,
- Christopher P. Miller3,
- Joel F. Habener4,
- Ole D. Madsen1 and
- Palle Serup1
- 1Department of Developmental Biology, Hagedorn Research Institute, Gentofte, Denmark
- 2Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- 3Genetics Institute, Cambridge, Massachusetts
- 4Laboratory of Molecular Endocrinology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
- 5Bartholin Instituttet, H:S Kommunehospitalet, København, Denmark
- 6Department of Pathology, Herlev Hospital, Herlev, Denmark
Abstract
The homeodomain protein PDX-1 is critical for pancreas development and is a key regulator of insulin gene expression. PDX-1 nullizygosity and haploinsufficiency in mice and humans results in pancreatic agenesis and diabetes, respectively. At embryonic day (e) 10.5, PDX-1 is expressed in all pluripotential gut-derived epithelial cells destined to differentiate into the exocrine and endocrine pancreas. At e15, PDX-1 expression is downregulated in exocrine cells, but remains high in endocrine cells. The aim of this study was to determine whether targeted overexpression of PDX-1 to the exocrine compartment of the developing pancreas at e15 would allow for respecification of the exocrine cells. Transgenic (TG) mice were generated in which PDX-1 was expressed in the exocrine pancreas using the exocrine-specific elastase-1 promoter. These mice exhibited a marked dysmorphogenesis of the exocrine pancreas, manifested by increased rates of replication and apoptosis in acinar cells and a progressive fatty infiltration of the exocrine pancreas with age. Interestingly, the TG mice exhibited improved glucose tolerance, but absolute β-cell mass was not increased. These findings indicate that downregulation of PDX-1 is required for the proper maintenance of the exocrine cell phenotype and that upregulation of PDX-1 in acinar cells affects β-cell function. The mechanisms underlying these observations remain to be elucidated.
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to R. Scott Heller, PhD, Hagedorn Research Institute, DK 2820, Gentofte, Denmark. E-mail: shll{at}hagedorn.dk.
Received for publication 7 August 2000 and accepted in revised form 21 March 2001.
BrdU, bromo-deoxy-uridine; e, embryonic day; El, elastase; MPM, mitotic protein monoclonal; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; RT, reverse transcriptase; SURS, systematically uniformly random sampling; TG, transgenic.











