Production and Characterization of Reg Knockout Mice
Reduced Proliferation of Pancreatic β-Cells in Reg Knockout Mice
- Michiaki Unno,
- Koji Nata,
- Naoya Noguchi,
- Yoichi Narushima,
- Takako Akiyama,
- Takayuki Ikeda,
- Kei Nakagawa,
- Shin Takasawa and
- Hiroshi Okamoto
Abstract
Reg (regenerating gene) was isolated as a gene specifically expressed in regenerating islets. We have demonstrated in vitro and in vivo that the exogenous addition of rat and human Reg gene products, Reg/REG proteins, induced β-cell replication via the Reg receptor and thereby ameliorated experimental diabetes. In the present study, we produced Reg knockout mice by homologous recombination. The Reg gene disruption resulted in a null mutation. Knockout mice developed normally. Islets from the Reg knockout mice appeared morphologically indistinguishable from those of normal controls. However, [3H]thymidine incorporation in isolated islets from Reg knockout mice was decreased. When hyperplastic islets were induced by the injection of goldthioglucose, the average islet size in Reg knockout mice was significantly smaller than that of control Reg+/+ mice. We then produced transgenic mice carrying the Reg gene under the control of the rat insulin II promoter (Ins-Reg) to express Reg in β-cells. Isolated islets from the Ins-Reg transgenic mice showed increased [3H]thymidine incorporation. By intercrossing, we produced NOD mice carrying the Ins-Reg transgene and found that development of diabetes in the resultant Ins-Reg transgenic NOD mice was significantly retarded, coinciding with an increase in the pancreatic β-cell mass. These results indicate that Reg plays an important role in β-cell growth/regeneration.
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Hiroshi Okamoto, Professor and Chairman, Department of Biochemistry, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, 2-1 Seiryo-machi, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8575, Miyagi, Japan. E-mail: okamotoh{at}mail.cc.tohoku.ac.jp.
Received for publication 15 March 2002 and accepted in revised form 21 May 2002.
ES, embryonic stem; GTG, goldthioglucose; PTP, pancreatic thread protein.
The symposium and the publication of this article have been made possible by an unrestricted educational grant from Servier, Paris.
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