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Endocrine-committed progenitor cells retain their differentiation potential in the absence of neurogenin-3 expression

Authors: 
Prasadan K, Tulachan S, Guo P, Shiota C, Shah S, Gittes G
Citation: 
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2010 Jun 11;396(4):1036-41. doi: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2010.05.058. Epub 2010 May 13
Abstract: 
Neurogenin-3 (ngn-3) expression is critical for endocrine development in the developing pancreas. We found that when ngn-3 was inhibited in an E11.5 pancreas, using either morpholino antisense or siRNA, it led to a significant decrease in endocrine differentiation after seven days in culture. Endocrine differentiation was rescued when ngn-3 inhibition was withdrawn after three days of culture, suggesting that the embryonic pancreas retains progenitor cells with the ability to differentiate into endocrine cell types when ngn-3 expression recurs. To determine whether the rescue phenomenon observed after withdrawing ngn-3 antisense treatment was the result of the original endocrine-committed cells reinitiating endocrine differentiation, or was instead due to new recruitment of later progenitor cells, we blocked ngn-3 expression for only the last four days of a seven-day culture. Here, insulin-positive differentiation was slightly reduced, but there was a normal number of glucagon-positive cells. In addition, there was an increase in SOX9-positive cells in ngn-3 inhibited, as well as in ngn-3 rescued pancreata, with a significant proportion of these SOX9-positive cells co-localized with DBA, an early ductal marker. This increased number of cells with co-localization of SOX9 and DBA could indicate an increased numbers of endocrine progenitor cells.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
Mouse pancreas explant
Delivery Method: 
oligo bathing