Nestin-Lineage Cells Contribute to the Microvasculature but Not Endocrine Cells of the Islet
- Mary Kay Treutelaar1,
- Jennifer M. Skidmore2,
- Claudia L. Dias-Leme1,
- Manami Hara3,
- Lizhi Zhang4,
- Diane Simeone4,
- Donna M. Martin25 and
- Charles F. Burant1
- 1Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
- 2Department of Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
- 3Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
- 4Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
- 5Department of Human Genetics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
- Address correspondence and reprint requests to Charles Burant, MD, University of Michigan Medical Center, Box 0678, 1500 E. Medical Center Dr., Ann Arbor, MI 48109. E-mail: burantc{at}umich.edu
Abstract
To clarify the lineage relationship between cells that express the neural stem cell marker nestin and endocrine cells of the pancreas, we analyzed offspring of a cross between mice carrying a nestin promoter/enhancer-driven cre-recombinase (Nestin-cre) and C57BL/6J-Gtrosa26tm1Sor mice that carry a loxP-disrupted β-galactosidase gene (Rosa26). In nestin-cre+/tg;R26RloxP/+ embryos, cre-recombinase was detected in association with nestin-positive cells in the pancreatic mesenchyme with some of the nestin-positive cells lining vascular channels. In postnatal mice, pancreatic β-galactosidase expression was restricted to vascular endothelial cells of the islet and a subset of cells in the muscularis of arteries in a distribution identical to endogenous nestin expression. Ex vivo explants of mouse pancreatic ducts grew dense cultures that costained for nestin and β-galactosidase, demonstrating recombination in vitro. The cultures could be differentiated into complex stereotypic structures that contain nestin- and insulin-expressing cells. Nestin-cre+/tg;R26RloxP/+-derived duct cultures showed that insulin-positive cells were negative for β-galactosidase. These results indicate that both in vivo and in vitro pancreatic endocrine cells arise independently of nestin-positive precursors. The apparent vascular nature of the nestin-positive cell population and the close association with endocrine cells suggest that nestin-positive cells play an important role in the growth and maintenance of the islet.
- CNS, central nervous system
- GFP, green fluorescent protein
- MIP, mouse insulin I promoter
- RBC, red blood cell
Footnotes
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- Accepted June 23, 2003.
- Received January 14, 2003.
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