Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: dmelton{at}mcb.harvard.edu)
Accepted 25 February 2002
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Mouse, Pancreas, NGN3, PDX1
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INTRODUCTION |
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A second line of experiments used to draw conclusions about pancreatic and islet progenitors is the phenotype of knockout mice (Nielsen et al., 1999; Dohrmann et al., 2000
; Edlund, 1999
; Kim and Hebrok, 2001
). These studies have focused attention on two transcription factors, Pdx1 (Ohlsson et al., 1993
; Guz et al., 1995
) and Ngn3 (also known as Math4B or Atoh5) (Sommer et al., 1996
). The pancreas duodenal homeobox gene, Pdx1, is one of the earliest genes expressed in the developing pancreas. Pdx1 expression is first detected in three endodermal domains on the dorsal and the two ventrolateral sides of the fore-midgut junction at E8.5 (Guz et al., 1995
; Offield et al., 1996
). As organogenesis continues, PDX1 is detected throughout the region that forms the pancreas and in part of the presumptive stomach and duodenum. After birth, Pdx1 expression is restricted to ß cells within the endocrine islets in the pancreas, as well as a few epithelial cells in the dorsal side of the stomach and all the mucosa cells in the duodenum (Offield et al., 1996
). Pdx1 mutants have no pancreas, promoting the idea that PDX1+ cells are general pancreatic progenitors (Jonsson et al., 1994
; Offield et al., 1996
). However, Pdx1 mutants do generate some glucagon- and insulin-expressing cells in early embryogenesis and a pancreatic bud forms and later regresses. This raises the question of whether a Pdx1-independent pathway exists for pancreas generation. Herrera (Herrera, 2000
) addressed some of these issues by tagging Pdx1-expressing cells with a Cre-LoxP system. His experiments convincingly demonstrate that PDX1+ progenitors give rise to mature
and ß islet cells, though the origin of the exocrine and duct cells were not addressed.
The Ngn3 knockout phenotype is particularly interesting in that exocrine tissue and pancreatic ducts are nearly normal, but differentiated endocrine cells (islets) are absent (Gradwohl et al., 2000). This phenotype, and the fact that Ngn3 is co-expressed with Pax6, Nkx6.1 and Neurod (Neurod1) in some cells (three genes that appear to be expressed in immature endocrine cells) has led to the conclusion that embryonic NGN3+ cells are endocrine progenitors (Jensen et al., 2000
; Schwitzgebel et al., 2000
). However, this conclusion is not entirely justified because Ngn3 may function non-autonomously for islet development, e.g. NGN3+ cells may be required to induce adjacent (NGN3) cells to form islet cells. Results from ectopic Ngn3 expression demonstrated that Ngn3 is sufficient to induce endocrine cell development, suggesting that Ngn3 functions in a cell-autonomous fashion. However, the lack of insulin-expressing cells in these ectopic islets raises the question of whether these NGN3+ progenitors give rise to mature ß cells (Apelqvist et al., 1999
; Schwitzgebel et al., 2000
; Graphin-Botton et al., 2001
). The fact that PAX6, NKX6.1 and NEUROD are detected in cells other than those expressing NGN3+ (Jensen et al., 2000
; Schwitzgebel et al., 2000
) raises the possibility that other NGN3 cells also contribute to endocrine cell populations.
We have used a direct lineage tracer to determine whether the PDX1+ cells give rise to all pancreatic tissue and whether NGN3+ cells are indeed endocrine progenitors. The Pdx1 or Ngn3 promoters were used to drive the expression of the phage recombinase CRE or an inducible form of CRE, CRE-ERTM (Metzger et al., 1995; Danielian et al., 1998
; Sauer, 1998
; Rossant and McMahon, 1999
; Nagy and Mar, 2001
). This procedure irreversibly tags the progeny of PDX1+ or NGN3+ cells in reporter mice that express the marker human placental alkaline phosphatase (HPAP) only after CRE-dependent excision of a transcription stop sequence.
The advantage of using the CRE-ERTM version for lineage analysis is that this protein remains in the cytoplasm and is inactive until a ligand, tamoxifen (TM), is provided (Metzger et al., 1995; Danielian et al., 1998
). Once TM is added, TM-bound CRE-ERTM is transported to the nucleus and catalyzes recombination, thereby allowing the expression of the HPAP reporter gene (Lobe et al., 1999
). Thus, cells can be marked at any time during development, not just at the time when Pdx1 or Ngn3 is first expressed. An added feature of the reporter line, the Z/AP mice (Lobe et al., 1999
), is that cells that fail to undergo recombination maintain lacZ expression. Thus, cells that have never expressed Pdx1 or Ngn3 can be identified by ß-galactosidase staining or antibodies against ß-galactosidase.
By controlling the time at which tamoxifen is given, we are able to characterize the progeny of specific sets of PDX1+ or NGN3+ cells born at different stages of development. This improved lineage marking approach provides direct evidence that all three types of pancreatic tissues are derived from PDX1+ progenitors and NGN3+ cells are endocrine progenitors that gave rise to all four types of islet cells. We further demonstrate that the competence of a large majority of the early pancreatic progenitors is restricted to either duct or an endocrine/exocrine fate before embryonic day 12.5.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Transgene constructs and Cre recombination
To generate the Pdx1-Cre construct, a 5.5 kb SalI-SmaI fragment (blunt-ended) containing the Pdx1 promoter from pKSpdx-1SalI (#571, a kind gift from C. Wright, Fig. 1) was ligated to the XbaI-digested (blunt-ended) pMC-Cre (a kind gift from A. McMahon). The insert was released by SalI and NotI digestion. For Pdx-1-Cre-ERTM, the coding region of the Cre-ERTM cDNA was directly fused to the starting ATG of the PDX1 protein by PCR. Three primers (p5, 5'-ttgaaacaagtgcaggtgttcg-3'; p75, 5'-gttgcatcgaccggtaatgcaggcaaattttggtgtacggtcagtaaattggacatggtggcagccggcact-3'; and p71, 5'-gttgcatcgaccggtaatgca-3') were used. First, p5 and p75 were used to amplify a 400 base pair fragment from the Pdx1 genomic DNA. Then this fragment was used together with p5 and p71 and the Cre-ERTM plasmid (A. McMahon) to obtain a fragment that has the 5' end coding region directly fused to the Pdx1 promoter. This fragment was digested with AgeI and ligated to the XhoI (blunt-ended)-AgeI double-digested pBSCre-ERTM that contains the full-length Cre-ERTM-coding region (courtesy of A. McMahon) to give pGD19. Then a 2.2 kb insert was released from pGD19 by SmaI-SpeI digestion and ligated to SmaI-NotI digested pKSpdx-1SalI, and a SpeI-NotI digested PCR fragment that contains the SV40 polyadenylation signal to give pGD35. The 8 kb insert was released by SalI-NotI digestion and was used for pronucleus injection.
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The Ngn3-Cre construct was obtained by directly ligating a XbaI-BssHII (partial digestion) blunt-ended fragment from pGD15 to the pMC-Cre plasmid to generate pGD 84. The insert was released by NotI-SalI digestion and used for transgenic animal production. To eliminate the possible expression variance between transgenic lines, at least three independent lines were generated for each construct.
For lineage analysis, Cre-ERTM or Cre transgenic animals were crossed with the reporter line, Z/AP (a kind gift from C. Lobe). Females received an intraperitoneal injection of 1 mg (or 0.7 mg for low dose) of TM at E8.5, E9.5, E10.5, E11.5, E12.5, E14.5 or E16.5 (Fig. 1). Double transgenic progeny were identified by PCR (primers used for the reporter line: p108, 5'-atcgctgatttgtgtagtcggt-3'; and p116, 5'-caacagttgcgcagcctgaatg-3') (primers for the Cre-ERTM line: p111, 5'-tgccacgaccaagtgacagc-3'; and p112, 5'-ccaggttacggatatagttcatg-3') and the excision event by HPAP staining. To assay the excision event in postnatal animals, 3- to 8-week-old double transgenic animals received one or three 2 mg doses of TM on consecutive days and reporter gene expression was scored 3 or 7 days after the last injection. The AP activity was detected using the method of Lobe et al. (Lobe et al., 1999). After color development, the tissue was washed in PBS and counterstained with Hematoxylin.
Statistical analysis
Fifty random fields from stained sections were digitally photographed using an Optronics camera and printed at 125x magnification to count the number of HPAP+ or HPAP islet cells and the area of HPAP-positive and -negative clones in exocrine and duct tissues. The frequency of all HPAP+ cells in exocrine tissue at various stages of development is set at 1 (see Fig. 4). This eliminates differences in the efficiency of TM-induced recombination when comparing different stages of development. The frequency of HPAP+ islet cells is calculated as the percentage of HPAP+ islet cells/the percentage of HPAP+ exocrine tissue. If this number remains the same at different stages of development, it would indicate that PDX1+ cells from different stages of development contain a comparable ratio of endocrine and exocrine progenitors. The frequency of HPAP+ duct cells is calculated as the percentage of HPAP+ duct cells/ the percentage of HPAP+ exocrine tissue.
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Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization
The primary antibodies used were mouse anti-human placental alkaline phosphatase (Accurate Chemicals, Westbury, NY), guinea pig anti-human C-peptide, guinea pig anti-glucagon, rabbit anti-pancreatic polypeptide, rabbit anti-somatostatin (Jackson Immunoreserarch, West Grove, PA), mouse anti ß galactosidase (Promega, Madison, WI), guinea pig anti-vimentin and rat anti PECAM (Research Diagnostics, Flanders, NJ). The secondary antibodies used were Cy3-conjugated donkey anti-guinea pig IgG, Cy3-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit IgG, Cy3 or FITC-conjugated sheep anti-mouse IgG, biotin-conjugated donkey anti-rat IgG, biotin-conjugated donkey anti-guinea pig IgG, streptavadin-HRP, streptavadin-FITC and streptoavadin-Cy3 (Jackson Immunoresearch, West Grove, PA). For the BrdU incorporation assay, a cell proliferation kit (Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ) was used. Biotin labeled Wisteria floribunda agglutinin is from Sigma-Aldrich (St Louis, MO).
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RESULTS |
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The first control, shown in Fig. 2A, demonstrates that pancreatic cells in these transgenic mice do not express HPAP without the presence of CRE recombinase. A second control, Fig. 2B, shows that when Cre is expressed under the control of a general promoter, PGK (Lallemand et al., 1998), to induce recombination in all cells, every cell expresses HPAP. In the double transgenic Pdx1-Cre;Z/AP pancreas, acini, islets and ducts all express HPAP (Fig. 2C). In every section examined, the acini, islets and ducts were labeled by HPAP stain. Histological staining and the organization of the cells identified the various tissues. For example, ducts were identified by the alignment of cells and nuclei (see Fig. 2A,C) and by staining with Wisteria fluoribunda agglutinin (WFA, which stains ducts but not blood vessels) (Lammert et al., 2001
). The only pancreatic cells not expressing HPAP were mesenchymal cells: endothelial cells (recognized by PECAM antibodies, Fig. 2C) and mesenchyme-derived smooth muscle cells. Further evidence for this point is shown in Fig. 2D where we took advantage of the fact that the reporter mouse (Z/AP) expresses ß-galactosidase in all cells unless Cre recombinase is present (in which case the lacZ gene is removed; see Fig. 1C). We used PECAM and vimentin antibodies that label blood vessels and mesenchymal cells, respectively, to determine whether these are the only cells that maintain ß-galactosidase expression. Indeed, as shown in Fig. 2D, PECAM or vimentin antibodies also label all cells that maintain lacZ expression. These data also show, as expected, that PDX1+ cells do not give rise to mesodermal tissues (blood vessels and mesenchyme).
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Exocrine/endocrine cells and duct cells arise from different lineages
Four transgenic mouse lines driving Cre-ERTM expression under the control of the Pdx1 promoter were also generated. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemical analyses demonstrated that three lines recapitulate endogenous Pdx1 expression (the other line had a low copy number of the transgene and did not express the transgene; data not shown). Two lines (p35.6 and p35.10) were chosen to cross with the Z/AP reporter line (Fig. 1D) to determine whether cells that express Pdx1 at different stages of development give rise to a different spectrum of mature pancreatic cells.
The CRE-ERTM protein requires tamoxifen (TM) to catalyze LoxP site-mediated excision. We determined the time window during which TM is effective by injecting 1 mg of TM into E5.5, E6.5 and E7.5 plugged females and testing for HPAP labeling in Pdx1-Cre-ERTM;Z/AP pancreata of newborn mice. We failed to find any HPAP+ cells when TM was injected at E5.5 (n=5). When TM was administered at E6.5 (n=4), less than 0.1% pancreatic cells were labeled in the double transgenic animals. We observed HPAP staining in more than 3% of pancreatic cells in all double transgenic animals (only non-duct tissue) when TM was injected at E7.5 (n=5). Because Pdx1 expression is first detected at E8.5 (Guz et al., 1995; Offield et al., 1996
), these results suggest that TM is active for less than 48 hours in injected mice. Therefore, this system allows one to mark the progeny of PDX1+ cells indelibly within a 48 hour window at any stage of development by activating CRE recombinase with tamoxifen injections.
TM was administered at E9.5 and the HPAP staining pattern was tested in pancreata of 8-week-old double transgenic animals. As shown in Fig. 2E-G, HPAP labeling is found in all three types of pancreatic tissue: endocrine (Fig. 2E), exocrine (Fig. 2F) and ducts (Fig. 2G,H). In all cases, only part of the pancreatic tissue is labeled, resulting in a mosaic HPAP staining pattern. We examined six 8-week-old adults and found that 3-15% of exocrine, endocrine and duct cells were labeled. Both transgenic lines, p35.6 and p35.10, give similar HPAP staining patterns.
One possible reason for incomplete labeling is that PDX1+ cells are born continuously from PDX1 cells during embryogenesis and the TM marks cells expressing PDX1 within a 48 hour period. Another possibility is that the TM-induced recombination is not 100% efficient. We could not apply TM at more than a 1 mg dose/animal without toxic side effects and this concentration might be insufficient to induce all the Cre-ERTM-positive cells to undergo excision (Danielian et al., 1998). When a higher TM dose (1.5 mg/animal) is injected, we observed an increased portion (as high as 25-30%) of the pancreatic tissue being labeled, though the relative amount of each labeled tissue remains constant (data not shown). Thus, the efficiency of TM induced recombination does not effect the conclusion as to the eventual fate of the progeny of PDX1+ cells.
The mosaic pattern of the HPAP staining displays three features. First, HPAP+ cells within islets are scattered randomly (Fig. 2E), consistent with a previous report concluding that islets are not clonal (Deltour et al., 1991). The second feature is that the HPAP+ cells within acini or ducts are most often found in contiguous groups as if they are derived from a single cell (Fig. 2F-H). This is consistent with the idea that tight junctions between developing exocrine and duct-like cells restrict their migration during development (Pictet et al., 1972
). The third feature is that the HPAP+ acinar clones and ductal clones are not adjacent (Fig. 2G,H). This result indicates, but does not prove, that a single PDX1+ progenitor does not give rise to both mature acinar and ductal tissue.
Pancreatic duct progenitors express Pdx1 between E10.5 and 12.5
We performed additional lineage analyses of PDX1+ cells by injecting TM at several other embryonic stages and postnatal mice, in each case scoring for HPAP+ cells 8 weeks after birth. If TM is administered at E9.5, E10.5 or E11.5, exocrine, endocrine and duct cells are labeled (Fig. 3). However, when TM is given at E8.5 or E12.5 and anytime thereafter, we only observed islet and acini cells being labeled (Fig. 3B-E). Stated otherwise, HPAP label is observed in duct cells only if TM is given between E9.5, E10.5 and 11.5, not before and not after. This result is not dependent on the time at which the labeled progeny are assayed. We have examined additional animals at 3, 6 or 12 weeks after birth and in every case the duct cells are labeled if and only if the TM was give between E9.5 and E11.5.
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When postnatal mice receive TM, HPAP+ cells are found in exocrine and endocrine tissues. As we do not find any duct cells labeled when TM is injected into postnatal mice, we conclude that Pdx1-expressing duct progenitors are very rare, if not absent, in postnatal mice.
NGN3+ cells give rise to islets
We isolated a 6.7 kb Ngn3 genomic fragment and generated four transgenic lines that express Cre-ERTM under the control of the Ngn3 promoter (Fig. 1B). In situ hybridization using Ngn3 and Cre-ERTM probes on adjacent pancreas sections showed that the transgene is correctly expressed, i.e. the transgene is expressed in cells that transcribe the endogenous NGN3 gene (Fig. 5A,B). Two of the four transgenic lines (p29.4 and p29.10) were crossed with the reporter line, Z/AP. Lineage analysis was performed by giving TM at several stages of development and assessing HPAP+ cells in the pancreas 3-8 weeks after birth.
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A systematic test of one-fifth of 15 sectioned pancreata from a single transgenic line was performed to look for labeled cells that were not in islets. A consistent finding of non-islet cells would suggest that NGN3+ cells give rise to more than just islets. However, we found a total of only nine HPAP+ cells that were not in islets compared with over 2000 HPAP+ cells present in islets (one cell in each of four pancreata that received TM at E8.5; four cells in five pancreata that received TM at E10.5, one cell found in three pancreata that received TM at E12.5 and three cells found in three pancreata that received TM at E14.5). These nine cells reside in pancreatic ducts (data not shown) and may result from rare mis-expression of the transgene or rare and transient expression in ducts. In any case, the vast majority of the NGN3+ cells in developing embryos divided and formed endocrine islets.
NGN3+ cells produce all four types of islet endocrine cells
Double immunostaining was performed using antibodies against HPAP and either insulin, glucagon, PP or somatostatin. All four types of HPAP/hormone double positive cells are detected in animals that received TM at either E8.5 (Fig. 5E) or E12.5 (data not shown). We conclude that NGN3+ cells from different stages of embryogenesis give rise to all four types of endocrine islet cells. This result suggests that although high levels of hormones, such as somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide, are not detected until very late in embryogenesis (after E17.5) (Gittes and Rutter, 1992), the progenitors for these cells are determined and are set aside before E9.5. Because the HPAP protein is membrane bound, whereas the four hormones are largely cytoplasmic, it is difficult to accurately count the number of each type of endocrine cell generated from a specific set of NGN3+ progenitors. Therefore, these data do not show whether NGN3+ progenitors at different stages of development give rise to the same ratios of all four endocrine cell types.
NGN3+ progenitors contribute to postnatal islet cell development
We employed this same experimental design to determine whether Ngn3-expressing cells contribute to islet maintenance or renewal in adult mice. Previous studies suggested that Ngn3 expression is turned off in postnatal mice as judged by immunohistochemistry (Jensen et al., 2000; Schwitzgebel et al., 2000
). We reasoned that a small number of NGN3+ cells, perhaps with transient or low Ngn3 expression levels, could escape detection by immunohistochemistry. Indeed, Ngn3 expression is detected by RT-PCR in handpicked islets from 8-week-old mice (data not shown).
We tested whether HPAP-labeled islet cells are observed when TM is administered in three or eight week old Ngn3-Cre-ERTM;Z/AP mice. One or three doses of 2 mg of TM were injected into 3-week- (n=15) and 8-week-old (n=10) double transgenic animals. The 25 pancreata were sectioned 1, 4 or 7 days after the last TM injection. HPAP+ islet cells were detected in 15 of 25 pancreata (nine out of the 15 in 3-week-old mice, and six out of the 10 in 8-week-old mice), with no significant difference between individual animals (Fig. 6). Without TM injection, no pancreatic cells expressing HPAP were found in the five double transgenic animals examined. The level of Cre-ERTM in the other 10 animals may have been too low to label a significant number of cells. We performed double labeling using antibodies against HPAP and insulin and found that many HPAP+ cells express insulin (data not shown), suggesting that they are mature ß-cells. Scanning one-fifth of all sections (including three pancreata that were characterized 24 hours after TM injection) revealed no HPAP+ cells in non-islet tissues.
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Mature pancreatic duct cells derive from progenitors that do not express Ngn3
To test whether Ngn3-expressing progenitors also give rise to adult pancreatic ducts, we determined the position of HPAP+ cells in Ngn3-Cre;Z/AP double transgenic mice. In this case NGN3+ cells are labeled immediately after Ngn3 expression is initiated, without the requirement for tamoxifen.
In two independent Ngn3-Cre transgenic lines, all islets cells, in both newborn and adult animals, express HPAP (Fig. 7A,B). Corresponding to this complete expression of HPAP, all the islet cells (except for endothelial cells within islets) lack ß-galactosidase staining (data not shown). These data provide additional evidence that all islet cells derive from NGN3+ progenitors. By counting HPAP+ cells in 150 sections of four double transgenic pancreata (10-week-old, see Materials and Methods) we found less than one in a thousand exocrine or duct cells labeled (103/146,250 for acini and 16/20,270 for ducts). Thus, the vast majority of mature pancreatic duct cells derive from progenitors that have not expressed NGN3. However, as noted above, the data do not rule out the possibility that some endocrine progenitors reside in mature pancreatic ducts, transiently turn on Ngn3 and then migrate to mature islets.
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NGN3+ cells behave as expanding progenitors rather than stem cells
If NGN3+ cells are self-renewing stem cells, they should divide to form a clone within which at least one cell maintains Ngn3 expression. In effect, the continued expression of NGN3 would be a molecular assay for self-renewal. The use of Cre-ERTM allows us to label single NGN3+ cells by lowering the TM concentration so that the behavior of NGN-3+ clones derived from single cells can be followed.
Recombination by Cre-ERTM was induced between E8.5-E10.5 using three low doses of TM injection. This produces a low frequency of HPAP+ labeling so that individual clones could be identified. We examined whether these HPAP+ cells still expressed Ngn3 at E13.75-E14. At the same time, BrdU was administered 6 hours before sacrificing the animals to determine which cells were mitotically active. From 28 double transgenic embryos, we found 32 HPAP+ clones: 21 were composed of a single HPAP+ cell, five were composed of two-cell clones, and six were composed of three-cell clones (Fig. 8 and data not shown). We presume that these multi-cell clones derive from single NGN3+ progenitors because the frequency of the recombination was too low for individual HPAP+ cells to migrate to form clusters.
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These data are consistent with the notion that most of NGN3+ cells are transient progenitors, committed to an endocrine fate. Furthermore, the disappearance of Ngn3 expression suggests that NGN3+ cells are constantly born from NGN3 cells during development. This view is further supported by the observation that only a small number of islet cells are labeled when one dose of TM is administered during embryogenesis.
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DISCUSSION |
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Pdx1 expressing progenitors give rise to all three types of pancreatic tissue
Previous lineage tracing showed that Pdx1-expressing cells give rise to mature and ß cells in adult mice (Herrera, 2000
), but that study did not determine whether PDX1+ cells also gave rise to other pancreatic cell types, e.g. exocrine, duct and other endocrine cells. Gannon et al. (Gannon et al., 2000
) examined other pancreatic cell types generated from Pdx1-expressing progenitors, but did not study whether all pancreatic cells are derived from PDX1+ precursors. We used the Z/AP (Lobe et al., 1999
) reporter to monitor the recombination mediated by the Pdx1 promoter driving CRE expression. Our results extend the findings of Herrera and demonstrate that all pancreatic tissue is derived from PDX1+ progenitors.
Progenitor cells for endocrine/exocrine and duct tissue diverge during early embryogenesis
A significant finding of our lineage tracing is the early separation of the adult duct progenitors from the exocrine and endocrine cell lineage. Based on the observation that insulin- or glucagon-positive cells often appear close to duct-like structures during embryogenesis and during regeneration after chemical treatment or surgical ablation (Teitleman and Lee, 1987; Dudek et al., 1991
; Gu et al., 1994
; Pang et al., 1994
; Bonner-Weir et al., 1993
), it is generally believed that the endocrine islets arise from the pancreatic duct (Edlund, 1999
; Bonner-Weir et al., 2000
). However, the lack of specific markers for early embryonic pancreatic ducts and a technique to follow individual cells in the pancreas made it difficult to determine the fate of cells within the embryonic duct-like structures, i.e. to determine whether those cells ever form adult ducts. Our results, based upon temporally controlled Cre recombination, demonstrate that exocrine and endocrine progenitors express Pdx1 throughout early embryogenesis. By contrast, adult duct progenitors express Pdx1 only between E9.5 and E12.5. These results suggest that the vast majority of progenitors for duct and exocrine/endocrine cells are separated before E12.5. This conclusion is consistent with the observation that islet cells form in the absence of ductal structures in vitro, i.e. endocrine cells can be generated without going through duct-like features (Gittes et al., 1996
).
NGN3+ cells are endocrine progenitors in embryos and in adults
By irreversibly marking cells, we provide direct evidence that NGN3+ cells are endocrine progenitors during embryogenesis. Consistent with the finding that Ngn3 expression is transient (Jensen et al., 2000; Schwitzgebel et al., 2000
), our analysis of NGN3+ progenitors demonstrates that individual NGN3+ cells do not maintain Ngn3 expression during embryogenesis from which we conclude that NGN3+ cells in early embryos behave as progenitors not stem cells.
Our data do not exclude the possibility that a population of endocrine stem cells exists that expresses a very low level of Ngn3. However, we and others find that endogenous Ngn3 and the NGN3 transgene are uniformly expressed (Jenson et al., 2000; Schwitzgebel et al., 2000
), i.e. there is no evidence for a population of cells that express a low level of Ngn3. We conclude that the majority, if not all, NGN3+ cells are endocrine progenitors that differentiate into endocrine cells without self-renewing.
Using the Cre-ERTM-LoxP system, we demonstrate that NGN3+ cells exist in the adult pancreas and can therefore contribute to the maintenance of adult endocrine islets. Owing to the weak promoter activity of Ngn3, the levels of Ngn3 and Cre-ER mRNAs in the transgenic animals is very low and we could not reliably detect these transcripts or the corresponding proteins. Thus, we could not directly determine the location of the Ngn3-Cre-ERTM-expressing cells in situ. Nonetheless, our detection of Ngn3 transcripts in purified islets and the fact that we never observe any HPAP+ cells in tissues other than islets, when TM is administered in adult animals, points to the possibility that islet progenitors reside in islets, consistent with the previous hypothesis by Fernandes et al. (Fernandes et al., 1997).
Many of the duct-like structures in early embryonic pancreata are islet progenitors and do not give rise to adult ducts
By following the progeny of NGN3+ cells, we demonstrate that some of the structures previously described as pancreatic ducts in embryos are derived from cells that expressed NGN3. Moreover, the results show that these cells within duct-like structures later coalesce to form mature islets, i.e. they are not duct progenitors, but rather endocrine progenitors. Other duct-like structures, those that do not contain progeny of NGN3+ cells, presumably give rise to the adult duct system. These findings point to the heterogeneity in developmental potential among duct-like structures in early embryo and further supports the notion that the endocrine/exocrine and ductal lineages are separated before E12.5. It also highlights the confusion in the literature surrounding the use of the term pancreatic duct to refer to structures in the embryo that have not been demonstrated to be duct progenitors.
With respect to the relationship between adult pancreatic ducts and islet (NGN3+) progenitors, our results do not exclude the possibility that a minor population of mature pancreatic duct cells activate Ngn3 expression and quickly exit the ducts to form islets. It is unlikely that the issue of ductal contribution to islets can be resolved until there are unequivocal markers for duct cells and their progenitors. In this regard, it should be noted that duct markers such as cytokeratin 19, carbonic anhydrase II and various lectins also stain other pancreatic cell types or only stain subtypes of pancreatic duct in embryos and newborns (Githens, 1994).
Limitations to conclusions based on results with transgenic animals
As with other transgenic systems, our conclusion depends on the extent to which the transgene faithfully recapitulate the wild-type pattern of gene expression. The Pdx1 promoter we used is well characterized and several studies showed that it drives the proper expression of the Pdx1-Cre or the Pdx1-Cre-ERTM transgene (Wu et al., 1997). We confirmed this by in situ hybridization on multiple transgenic lines using Pdx1 and the transgene as hybridization probes. Similarly, in situ hybridization on adjacent sections demonstrated that the Ngn3 promoter used is sufficient to drive the transgene expression properly at the stages we tested (E13.5 and E15.5). Yet, we have not counted each and every cell nor tested whether Pdx1 and Ngn3 expression is subject to post-transcriptional regulation. Thus, the conclusions are limited to cells that had transcriptionally active Pdx1 or Ngn3 promoters, and do not speak to the possibility that some cells transcribe the Pdx1 and Ngn3 genes and regulate the function of their protein products. With our experimental design, it was not practical to label a single endocrine progenitor during embryogenesis and look for its progeny in the adult. Thus, our data do not show whether a single NGN3+ cell gives rise to all four islet cell types.
Time of pancreatic lineage commitment
Our data are consistent with at least two models for pancreatic cell commitment (Fig. 9). In model one, duct progenitors and endocrine/exocrine progenitors diverge before E8.5 (i.e. before the onset of Pdx1 expression). At E8.5, an intracellular program or extracellular signals allows for Pdx1 expression in endocrine/exocrine progenitors and this can continue throughout embryogenesis. By contrast, the pre-determined duct progenitors do not begin expressing Pdx1 until E9.5 and then can only do so until E12.5. In the second model, the lineage of the duct and endocrine/exocrine progenitors does not separate until E12.5. In this scenario, cells within the prospective pancreatic region have the same potential before E8.5. When cells within the region start to express Pdx1, those that first express Pdx1 give rise to endocrine or exocrine tissues in adults. When cells express Pdx1 between E9.5 to E12.5, some will form pancreatic duct and others will form endocrine or exocrine cells. In both models, the duct and endocrine/exocrine progenitors diverge before E12.5. And in both scenarios, the initiation of Ngn3 expression within some PDX1+ cells establishes them as endocrine progenitors.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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REFERENCES |
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