MicroRNA Expression is Required for Pancreatic Islet Cell Genesis in the Mouse
- Francis C. Lynn, PhD1,
- Peter Skewes-Cox, BA1,
- Yasuhiro Kosaka, PhD1,
- Michael T. McManus, PhD1,,2,
- Brian D. Harfe, PhD4 and
- Michael S. German, MD (mgerman{at}diabetes.ucsf.edu)1,,3
- 1Diabetes Center, Hormone Research Institute,
- 2Department of Microbiology and Immunology, and
- 3Department of Medicine University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, U.S.A,
- 4Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA, 32610
Abstract
Objective: The generation of distinct cell types during the development of the pancreas depends on sequential changes in gene expression. We tested the hypothesis that microRNAs (miRNAs), which limit gene expression through post-transcriptional silencing, modulate the gene expression cascades involved in pancreas development.
Research Design and Methods: MiRNAs were cloned and sequenced from developing pancreas and expression of a subset of these genes was tested using LNA in situ analyses. To assess the overall contribution of miRNAs to pancreatic development, Dicer1, an enzyme required for miRNA processing, was conditionally deleted from the developing pancreas.
Results: Sequencing of small RNAs identified over 125 miRNAs, including 18 novel sequences, with distinct expression domains within the developing pancreas. To test the developmental contribution of these miRNAs, we conditionally deleted the miRNA processing enzyme Dicer1 early in pancreas development. Dicer null animals displayed gross defects in all pancreatic lineages, although the endocrine cells, and especially the insulin-producing β-cells, were most dramatically reduced. The endocrine defect was associated with an increase in the notch-signaling target Hes1 and a reduction in the formation of endocrine cell progenitors expressing the Hes1 target gene neurogenin3.
Conclusions: The expression of a unique profile of miRNAs is required during pancreas development and is necessary for β-cell formation.
Footnotes
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- Received February 7, 2007.
- Accepted August 26, 2007.
- Copyright © American Diabetes Association














