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Improved Glucose Tolerance and Acinar Dysmorphogenesis by Targeted Expression of Transcription Factor PDX-1 to the Exocrine Pancreas

  1. R. Scott Heller1,
  2. Doris A. Stoffers2,
  3. Troels Bock5,
  4. Kirsten Svenstrup5,
  5. Jan Jensen1,
  6. Thomas Horn6,
  7. Christopher P. Miller3,
  8. Joel F. Habener4,
  9. Ole D. Madsen1 and
  10. Palle Serup1
  1. 1Department of Developmental Biology, Hagedorn Research Institute, Gentofte, Denmark
  2. 2Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  3. 3Genetics Institute, Cambridge, Massachusetts
  4. 4Laboratory of Molecular Endocrinology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
  5. 5Bartholin Instituttet, H:S Kommunehospitalet, København, Denmark
  6. 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

    • 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.

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