β-Cells are not generated in pancreatic duct ligation–induced injury in adult mice

MM Rankin, CJ Wilbur, K Rak, EJ Shields… - Diabetes, 2013 - Am Diabetes Assoc
MM Rankin, CJ Wilbur, K Rak, EJ Shields, A Granger, JA Kushner
Diabetes, 2013Am Diabetes Assoc
The existence of adult β-cell progenitors remains the most controversial developmental
biology topic in diabetes research. It has been reported that β-cell progenitors can be
activated by ductal ligation–induced injury of adult mouse pancreas and apparently act in a
cell-autonomous manner to double the functional β-cell mass within a week by
differentiation and proliferation. Here, we demonstrate that pancreatic duct ligation (PDL)
does not activate progenitors to contribute to β-cell mass expansion. Rather, PDL stimulates …
The existence of adult β-cell progenitors remains the most controversial developmental biology topic in diabetes research. It has been reported that β-cell progenitors can be activated by ductal ligation–induced injury of adult mouse pancreas and apparently act in a cell-autonomous manner to double the functional β-cell mass within a week by differentiation and proliferation. Here, we demonstrate that pancreatic duct ligation (PDL) does not activate progenitors to contribute to β-cell mass expansion. Rather, PDL stimulates massive pancreatic injury, which alters pancreatic composition and thus complicates accurate measurement of β-cell content via traditional morphometry methodologies that superficially sample the pancreas. To overcome this potential bias, we quantified β-cells from the entire pancreas and observed that β-cell mass and insulin content are totally unchanged by PDL-induced injury. Lineage-tracing studies using sequential administration of thymidine analogs, rat insulin 2 promoter–driven cre-lox, and low-frequency ubiquitous cre-lox reveal that PDL does not convert progenitors to the β-cell lineage. Thus, we conclude that β-cells are not generated in injured adult mouse pancreas.
Am Diabetes Assoc