Abstract
How tissues generate and maintain the correct number of cells is a fundamental problem in biology. In principle, tissue turnover can occur by the differentiation of stem cells, as is well documented for blood, skin and intestine, or by the duplication of existing differentiated cells. Recent work on adult stem cells has highlighted their potential contribution to organ maintenance and repair. However, the extent to which stem cells actually participate in these processes in vivo is not clear. Here we introduce a method for genetic lineage tracing to determine the contribution of stem cells to a tissue of interest. We focus on pancreatic β-cells, whose postnatal origins remain controversial. Our analysis shows that pre-existing β-cells, rather than pluripotent stem cells, are the major source of new β-cells during adult life and after pancreatectomy in mice. These results suggest that terminally differentiated β-cells retain a significant proliferative capacity in vivo and cast doubt on the idea that adult stem cells have a significant role in β-cell replenishment.
Similar content being viewed by others
Main
The literature on pancreatic β-cells and islets of Langerhans is replete with studies suggesting various mechanisms for β-cell homeostasis and regenerative repair. Early studies on patterns of [3H]thymidine incorporation indicated that adult pancreatic endocrine cells belong to a class of tissues that could be maintained by the self-duplication of differentiated cells1,2,3. More recent immunohistochemical observations suggest a stem-cell origin for islet cells, including insulin-expressing β-cells4. It has been proposed that these adult pancreatic stem or progenitor cells reside in the epithelium of pancreatic ducts5,6, inside islets7 or in the bone marrow8. Others have suggested that β-cells form in the adult by transdifferentiation of pancreatic acinar cells9, islet cells that express hormones other than insulin10, or splenocytes11. In addition to explaining the formation of new β-cells within existing islets, it has also been suggested that whole new islets form (islet neogenesis) by clustering of new β-cells that are derived from stem cells5,12,13. However, all of these models and suggestions are, for the most part, based on the interpretation of static histological data rather than direct lineage analysis14.
We developed a simple method for distinguishing stem-cell-derived β-cells from the progeny of pre-existing β-cells. Fully differentiated β-cells, defined here as post-natal cells transcribing the insulin gene, are heritably labelled in transgenic mice with a tamoxifen-inducible Cre/lox system (‘pulse’). The label is the expression of the human alkaline phosphatase protein, which can be detected by a histochemical stain. After a long period, during which turnover occurs (‘chase’), β-cells are examined for the presence of the label. Cells generated after the pulse are labelled if and only if they are the progeny of pre-existing (labelled) β-cells; new β-cells derived from any non-β source, including stem cells, are not labelled. Different models of β-cell dynamics have distinct predictions regarding the frequency and distribution of labelled β-cells within pancreatic islets after a chase period (Fig. 1a). New islets derived entirely from stem or progenitor cells—that is, cells not yet transcribing the insulin gene—would not contain labelled β-cells. In addition, if stem cells replenish β-cells within existing islets, the frequency of labelled β-cells should gradually decrease. By contrast, if new β-cells are derived by self-duplication, the frequency of labelled β-cells within islets should remain constant.
We generated a transgenic mouse strain in which the insulin promoter15 drives the expression of tamoxifen-dependent Cre recombinase16 (RIP–CreER). In this strain, the Cre–oestrogen-receptor (ER) fusion gene is expressed only in pancreatic β-cells, but the CreER protein is excluded from the cell nucleus. Tamoxifen injection results in a rapid and transient (about 48 h (ref. 17)) nuclear translocation of the CreER protein, which permits Cre-mediated recombination. As a readout for Cre activity we used a reporter strain (Z/AP)18 in which Cre-mediated removal of a stop sequence results in the constitutive and heritable expression of the gene encoding human placental alkaline phosphatase (HPAP) (Fig. 1b). Thus, a pulse of tamoxifen to bigenic RIP–CreER;Z/AP mice leads to HPAP expression in insulin-expressing cells present at the time of injection, as well as their progeny.
Control experiments with RIP–CreER;Z/AP mice were performed to assess the specificity of labelling after tamoxifen injection. HPAP+ cells are found only within islets (Fig. 2a); ducts, acini and blood vessels are not labelled (Fig. 2a). Double immunofluorescent analysis confirmed that ductal and acinar cells (detected by the DBA (Dolichos biflorus agglutinin) lectin and expressing amylase, respectively) do not express HPAP (Fig. 2c). Within islets, every HPAP+ cell (n > 1,000) expresses insulin (Fig. 2b). Non-β islet cells (those expressing glucagon, somatostatin or pancreatic polypeptide) were all HPAP-, as would be expected from an insulin-promoter-driven transgene (Fig. 2c). The frequency of HPAP+ cells depended on the tamoxifen dose (Fig. 2d). Thus, tamoxifen injection leads to a highly specific labelling of only differentiated β-cells (cells transcribing the insulin gene and positive for insulin by immunohistochemistry).
We injected tamoxifen into 24 RIP–CreER;Z/AP mice at 6–8 weeks of age, using a protocol (five injections of 4 mg tamoxifen) that resulted in HPAP expression in about 30% of β-cells. Eight mice were killed 2 days after the last injection (the pulse group) and the remaining 16 mice were killed 2.5 (n = 1), 4 (n = 2), 6 (n = 5), 9 (n = 4) or 12 (n = 4) months later (the chase groups). Note that the 12-month time point represents about one-half of a mouse's lifespan. Sections of the pancreas were stained for insulin to identify β-cells and for HPAP to identify the cells that transcribed the insulin gene at time 0 (the pulse) and their daughters (see Fig. 1).
No new islets are formed during adult life
To identify whether entirely new islets were generated during the chase period, we compared the number of islets that contained labelled β-cells in the pulse and chase. Islets derived from stem cells (cells not expressing insulin at the time of pulse) would be completely HPAP- in the chase pancreases. All islets analysed (n = 485 for the pulse group, n = 744 for the chase group; islet defined as a group of more than 10 β-cells) contained numerous HPAP+ β-cells. The finding that all islets in the chased mice contained β-cells that were present at the time of tamoxifen injection (or the progeny of such cells; Fig. 3a–c, h) suggests that no new islets are formed by stem or progenitor cells during adult life.
Given this unexpected result we extended our analysis to small, scattered clusters of 1–10 β-cells. The cells in these structures are often interpreted as newly formed, stem-cell-derived β-cells caught in the process of coalescing into larger or mature islets9,19,20,21,22,23. Such a model predicts that clusters found after a long chase should contain only HPAP- cells. In the pulse group, 77.8 ± 8.4% of the small clusters analysed (n = 1,268) contained HPAP+ β-cells, a frequency that was expected given the small size of the clusters and the efficiency of tamoxifen-dependent labelling. In the chase group, 81.8 ± 10.9% of the clusters analysed (n = 1,423) contained HPAP+ β-cells (Fig. 3d–h). Thus, there was no evidence that new clusters are generated from non-β-cells over the course of 12 months. We conclude, contrary to the commonly held view, that small clusters of β-cells do not represent stem-cell-derived islets. Rather, they might represent static mini-islets and/or disintegrating old islets. Taken together, these results point to the conclusion that no new islets are formed by stem or progenitor cells during adult life in the mouse (ruling out model 1 in Fig. 1a). The islets present in an old or middle-aged mouse are derived from islets that were present in ‘teenage life’ (2 months of age).
β-cells are formed by self-duplication of pre-existing β-cells
We next analysed these mice at the level of single cells, as opposed to islets, to examine β-cell maintenance. Sections of pulse and chase pancreases were stained for HPAP and insulin by double immunofluorescence, and scored for the percentage of β-cells that expressed HPAP+. The percentage of labelled β-cells, representing pre-existing β-cells or their progeny, remained stable in the chased mice (pulse, 4,759 β-cells counted from 7 mice, 27.4% HPAP+; chase, 8,988 β-cells counted from 11 mice, 29.54% HPAP+). Even 12 months after the pulse there was no indication of dilution of the labelled population (Fig. 3i). This result suggests that within established islets, β-cells are either post-mitotic (see below) or derive from the replication of pre-existing β-cells. The results are not consistent with β-cells forming from stem or progenitor cells (ruling out model 2 in Fig. 1a).
A trivial explanation to these results would be that very little β-cell turnover occurred during the chase. In such a model, new stem-cell-derived β-cells, even though HPAP-, might escape detection because of their low rate of formation. On the contrary, fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis of dissociated mouse pancreases shows that the absolute number of β-cells increases about 6.5-fold between 3 and 12 months of age ((3.3 ± 0.87) × 105 for 3-month-old mice, n = 5; (2.2 ± 0.9) × 106 for 10–12-month-old mice, n = 4) (Fig. 4). This means that at least 85% of β-cells present at 12 months of age were formed during the previous 9 months. Taking into account a conservative estimation of t1/2 = 3 months for adult rodent β-cells13, we estimate that 98% of β-cells present in an animal chased for 9 months were born after the pulse. A ‘static’ interpretation of the pulse–chase results is therefore untenable and we conclude that new β-cells are generated in the adult mouse primarily by the replication of pre-existing β-cells.
β-cell regeneration
Although the above experiments do not provide any evidence for the existence of stem or progenitor cells in the normal growth and maintenance of β-cells, it is possible that stem or progenitor cells do participate in other circumstances. For instance, an emerging concept in the field of adult stem cells is that of facultative stem cells, namely cells that acquire a stem cell character only after stimulation24,25. In the pancreas, such cells have been proposed to reside in ducts, acini or inside islets4. After injury, these cells are thought to first proliferate, then differentiate into β-cells and migrate to form new islets or replenish existing islets. To test this idea we used partial pancreatectomy (Px), an injury model in which regeneration has previously been documented4,5,12,26,27,28,29. We first verified that Px did indeed result in the generation of new β-cells. Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) was administered for 1 week to mice that had undergone partial (70%) Px or had been sham operated. In agreement with previous reports5,26,27, Px mice had a higher frequency of BrdU incorporation in all pancreatic cells (islets, acini, ducts and blood vessels) than sham-operated mice. This included a 2.6-fold increase in the frequency of BrdU+ β-cells after Px, indicative of β-cell regeneration (12.3% in Px versus 4.8% in sham-operated mice; n = 7,388 and 5,311 β-cells, respectively; Fig. 5a).
We injected tamoxifen into adult RIP–CreER;Z/AP mice (n = 2), and 4 days later 70% of their pancreas was removed. The mice were killed 2 months after the operation; the remnant of the pancreas, as well as the previously excised and fixed portion, were stained for insulin and HPAP. All islets examined in the remnant portion (n = 126) and in the excised portion (n = 111) contained numerous HPAP+ β-cells, showing that the islets found 2 months after Px existed before the operation. Furthermore, as observed during normal growth and adult life (Fig. 3), the frequency of clusters (groups of 1–10 β-cells) containing HPAP+ cells in the remnant portion (87.3%, n = 276) was similar to that in the excised portion (85.5%, n = 325), indicating that the clusters might not represent coalescing stem-cell-derived β-cells. These results suggest that, even after Px, no new islets are generated from stem cells. Furthermore, the frequency of HPAP+ β-cells within islets did not decrease after Px (data not shown), arguing against a significant contribution from non-β-cells or stem cells to the β-cells and islets found after pancreatectomy.
We wished to analyse directly the origin of new β-cells after Px, regardless of turnover rates or variations in labelling efficiency. To accomplish this we injected a high dose of tamoxifen (five injections of 8 mg) to another group of RIP–CreER;Z/AP mice (n = 5), and 14 days later performed 70% Px. BrdU was administered continuously for 2 weeks after the operation to label dividing cells, after which the mice were killed and their pancreases triple-stained for BrdU, insulin and HPAP (Fig. 5b). β-cells born after Px should express insulin and be BrdU+. If these new β-cells are derived from stem cells, they should be HPAP-; if they are the product of β-cell self-duplication, they should be HPAP+. The data show that new β-cells were HPAP+ in a frequency that precisely reflected the efficiency of recombination: 32 of 52 (61.5%) BrdU+ β-cells were HPAP+; 266 of 436 (61%) total β-cells counted were HPAP+. In other words, the results predict that if the labelling efficiency of β-cells were 100%, all new β-cells would have been HPAP+; that is, they would have come from β-cells existing at the time of Px. It is theoretically possible that a putative ‘stem cell’ directly differentiates into a β-cell without cell division—that is, without BrdU incorporation. However, the absence of HPAP dilution in the chase experiments described above is inconsistent with such a process contributing significantly to β-cell number. This result further suggests that β-cells are derived from β-cells, not from stem cells.
Discussion
We conclude that pre-existing β-cells are the major source for new β-cells during adult life, as well as during regeneration from partial pancreatectomy (Fig. 1a, model 3). This conclusion challenges the view that adult stem cells (undifferentiated cells capable of self-renewal and differentiation) are significant in β-cell homeostasis. Instead, we submit that terminally differentiated β-cells retain a proliferative capacity that can account for turnover and expansion throughout a mouse's life.
There are several ways in which our data could be reconciled with previous reports claiming the existence of pancreatic stem cells. First, our experiments cannot prove the absence of stem cells, given the degree of variation in labelling efficiency inherent to the CreER system. It is possible that rare stem or progenitor cells exist but give rise to a small, physiologically unimportant fraction of β-cells17. A convincing demonstration of such putative stem cells could be provided by genetic lineage tracing, for example by using a duct cell promoter driving Cre recombinase. Second, it is formally possible that the insulin gene is transcriptionally active in stem cells. If so, these putative stem cells must be unipotent because HPAP+ cells gave rise only to β-cells. Even after a long chase, no other endocrine, exocrine or ductal cells were HPAP+. In effect, such putative unipotent stem cells would be indistinguishable from β-cells. Third, facultative pancreatic stem cells might exist and be activated in response to specific insults other than pancreatectomy24,30. Fourth, the vast majority of Px and regeneration studies were done with rats rather than mice and it is possible that these species differ in the mode of regeneration. Last, β-cells could transiently dedifferentiate (and possibly acquire stem cell markers) before generating new β-cells12. A similar process is thought to occur during angiogenesis, in which differentiated endothelial cells give rise to ‘activated endothelium’, which then proliferates and organizes into new blood vessels31. However, there is currently no evidence for such a mechanism in the pancreas.
It has been suggested that new lobes, including new islets, are constantly generated in the adult pancreas13,32. In contrast, the data presented here support the idea that the number of islets during adult life is fixed, with homeostatic responses (for example, β-cell expansion) being performed by differentiated cells residing in these structural units. Indeed, it was recently reported that average islet size, but not islet density, increases with age33,34,35. Our studies indicate that there is a time during embryonic development, or early postnatal life, at which the number of islets is set. The data also indicate that β-cell formation from undifferentiated precursors ceases at this time in that new β-cells that form subsequently come from pre-existing β-cells. Further experiments are required to determine when this switch occurs.
Our results emphasize the importance of using direct lineage tracing, rather than histological snapshots, to determine a cell of origin or the provenance of a given tissue. The method presented here can be adapted to assess the contribution of stem cells in other organs during growth, normal turnover and regeneration. In addition, it could be used to determine the cell of origin in cancer models.
One implication of this study concerns possible cell-based therapies for type I diabetes, in which β-cells are destroyed by an autoimmune attack. It points to the significant proliferative potential of differentiated β-cells in vivo, a capacity that might be exploited for expansion to a clinically useful mass. In addition, the results highlight the fact that embryonic stem cells are currently the only type of stem cell that is unquestionably capable of differentiation into β-cells.
Methods
Mice
Z/AP reporter mice were a gift from C. Lobe18. The RIP–CreER construct was generated by fusing a 0.66-kilobase SmaI–HindIII fragment of the RIP2 promoter15 to a minimal hsp68 promoter (a gift from M. Gannon36), and placing the chimaeric promoter upstream of CreER (a gift from A. McMahon16). Transgenic mice were created by injection of the construct into the pronucleus. Three founders were identified that, when crossed with Z/AP, showed β-cell-specific expression of HPAP (defined by immunohistochemical co-localization of HPAP and insulin). For this study we used two lines that showed efficient recombination. Both lines showed tamoxifen-dependent expression of HPAP. By 10 months of age, double transgenic mice that did not receive tamoxifen had occasionally one to five HPAP+ cells per islet, reflecting the cumulative lifetime leakage of the system. RIP–CreER;Z/AP double transgenic mice were generated by crossing single heterozygous transgenics. Tamoxifen (Sigma) was dissolved in corn oil at 20 mg ml-1 and injected intraperitoneally or subcutaneously twice a week. RIP–CreER;Z/AP mice treated with tamoxifen remained euglycaemic and had normal pancreatic histology, indicating that tamoxifen injection, Cre-mediated recombination and HPAP expression had no adverse effects. For continuous labelling of dividing cells, BrdU (Sigma) was given in the drinking water at 0.8 mg ml-1, and the water was changed every other day.
Analysis
Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded 6-µm sections of the pancreas were used. We identified β-cells by immunostaining for insulin (guinea-pig anti-insulin (Dako), dilution 1:500) or for pdx1 (guinea-pig anti-pdx1 (a gift from C. Wright), dilution 1:500). Other pancreatic cell types were identified with the following antibodies: guinea-pig anti-glucagon (Linco; dilution 1:200), sheep anti-somatostatin (ARP; dilution 1:200), guinea-pig anti-pancreatic polypeptide (Linco; dilution 1:200) and rabbit anti-amylase (Sigma; dilution 1:200). Ducts were labelled with biotinylated DBA lectin (vector; dilution 1:200). HPAP+ cells were identified by incubating slides with alkaline phosphatase substrate as described17,18 or by immunostaining (rabbit anti-HPAP (Zymed), dilution 1:100, or goat anti-HPAP (Santa Cruz), dilution 1:100). BrdU+ cells were stained with biotinylated anti-BrdU antibodies (BrdU in-situ detection kit (Becton Dickinson), dilution 1:100). For both HPAP and BrdU immunostaining we performed antigen retrieval (Retrievagen A; Becton Dickinson) before incubation with primary antibody. Secondary antibodies conjugated with horseradish peroxidase, fluorescein isothiocyanate, rhodamine (Jackson) or CY5 (Molecular Probes) were used at 1:200 dilution. Flow cytometry was carried out with MoFlo (Cytomation). Pancreases were dissociated to a single-cell suspension essentially as described37,38 and cells were stained with guinea-pig anti-insulin antibody followed by a CY5-conjugated anti-guinea-pig antibody.
References
Messier, B. & Leblond, C. P. Cell proliferation and migration as revealed by radioautography after injection of thymidine-H3 into male rats and mice. Am. J. Anat. 106, 247–285 (1960)
Leblond, C. P. in International Symposium on the Control of Cell Division and the Induction of Cancer (ed. Congdon, C. C.) 119–150 (Natl Cancer Inst., Bethesda, Maryland, 1964)
Tsubouchi, S., Kano, E. & Suzuki, H. Demonstration of expanding cell populations in mouse pancreatic acini and islets. Anat. Rec. 218, 111–115 (1987)
Bonner-Weir, S. & Sharma, A. Pancreatic stem cells. J. Pathol. 197, 519–526 (2002)
Bonner-Weir, S., Baxter, L. A., Schuppin, G. T. & Smith, F. E. A second pathway for regeneration of adult exocrine and endocrine pancreas. A possible recapitulation of embryonic development. Diabetes 42, 1715–1720 (1993)
Zajicek, G., Arber, N., Schwartz-Arad, D. & Ariel, I. Streaming pancreas: islet cell kinetics. Diabetes Res. 13, 121–125 (1990)
Zulewski, H. et al. Multipotential nestin-positive stem cells isolated from adult pancreatic islets differentiate ex vivo into pancreatic endocrine, exocrine, and hepatic phenotypes. Diabetes 50, 521–533 (2001)
Ianus, A., Holz, G. G., Theise, N. D. & Hussain, M. A. In vivo derivation of glucose-competent pancreatic endocrine cells from bone marrow without evidence of cell fusion. J. Clin. Invest. 111, 843–850 (2003)
Lipsett, M. & Finegood, D. T. Beta-cell neogenesis during prolonged hyperglycemia in rats. Diabetes 51, 1834–1841 (2002)
Guz, Y., Nasir, I. & Teitelman, G. Regeneration of pancreatic beta cells from intra-islet precursor cells in an experimental model of diabetes. Endocrinology 142, 4956–4968 (2001)
Kodama, S., Kuhtreiber, W., Fujimura, S., Dale, E. A. & Faustman, D. L. Islet regeneration during the reversal of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice. Science 302, 1223–1227 (2003)
Bonner-Weir, S. Life and death of the pancreatic beta cells. Trends Endocrinol. Metab. 11, 375–378 (2000)
Finegood, D. T., Scaglia, L. & Bonner-Weir, S. Dynamics of beta-cell mass in the growing rat pancreas. Estimation with a simple mathematical model. Diabetes 44, 249–256 (1995)
Slack, J. M. Developmental biology of the pancreas. Development 121, 1569–1580 (1995)
Hanahan, D. Heritable formation of pancreatic beta-cell tumours in transgenic mice expressing recombinant insulin/simian virus 40 oncogenes. Nature 315, 115–122 (1985)
Danielian, P. S., Muccino, D., Rowitch, D. H., Michael, S. K. & McMahon, A. P. Modification of gene activity in mouse embryos in utero by a tamoxifen-inducible form of Cre recombinase. Curr. Biol. 8, 1323–1326 (1998)
Gu, G., Dubauskaite, J. & Melton, D. A. Direct evidence for the pancreatic lineage: NGN3 + cells are islet progenitors and are distinct from duct progenitors. Development 129, 2447–2457 (2002)
Lobe, C. G. et al. Z/AP, a double reporter for cre-mediated recombination. Dev. Biol. 208, 281–292 (1999)
Wang, R. N., Kloppel, G. & Bouwens, L. Duct- to islet-cell differentiation and islet growth in the pancreas of duct-ligated adult rats. Diabetologia 38, 1405–1411 (1995)
Yamamoto, K. et al. Recombinant human betacellulin promotes the neogenesis of beta-cells and ameliorates glucose intolerance in mice with diabetes induced by selective alloxan perfusion. Diabetes 49, 2021–2027 (2000)
Waguri, M. et al. Demonstration of two different processes of beta-cell regeneration in a new diabetic mouse model induced by selective perfusion of alloxan. Diabetes 46, 1281–1290 (1997)
Paris, M., Bernard-Kargar, C., Berthault, M. F., Bouwens, L. & Ktorza, A. Specific and combined effects of insulin and glucose on functional pancreatic beta-cell mass in vivo in adult rats. Endocrinology 144, 2717–2727 (2003)
Rooman, I., Lardon, J. & Bouwens, L. Gastrin stimulates beta-cell neogenesis and increases islet mass from transdifferentiated but not from normal exocrine pancreas tissue. Diabetes 51, 686–690 (2002)
Alison, M. R. Liver regeneration with reference to stem cells. Semin. Cell Dev. Biol. 13, 385–387 (2002)
Oh, S. H., Hatch, H. M. & Petersen, B. E. Hepatic oval ‘stem’ cell in liver regeneration. Semin. Cell Dev. Biol. 13, 405–409 (2002)
Liu, Y. Q., Montanya, E. & Leahy, J. L. Increased islet DNA synthesis and glucose-derived lipid and amino acid production in association with beta-cell hyperproliferation in normoglycaemic 60% pancreatectomy rats. Diabetologia 44, 1026–1033 (2001)
Fong, I., Hulinsky, I., Fortuna, R. & Silink, M. Mitotic activity and DNA synthesis of rat islet cells following partial pancreatectomy. Pancreas 7, 453–459 (1992)
Finegood, D. T., Weir, G. C. & Bonner-Weir, S. Prior streptozotocin treatment does not inhibit pancreas regeneration after 90% pancreatectomy in rats. Am. J. Physiol. 276, E822–E827 (1999)
Hardikar, A. A., Karandikar, M. S. & Bhonde, R. R. Effect of partial pancreatectomy on diabetic status in BALB/c mice. J. Endocrinol. 162, 189–195 (1999)
Fausto, N. & Campbell, J. S. The role of hepatocytes and oval cells in liver regeneration and repopulation. Mech. Dev. 120, 117–130 (2003)
Carmeliet, P. Angiogenesis in health and disease. Nature Med. 9, 653–660 (2003)
Bunnag, S. C. Postnatal neogenesis of islets of Langerhans in the mouse. Diabetes 15, 480–491 (1966)
Kushner, J. A. et al. Pdx1 restores beta cell function in Irs2 knockout mice. J. Clin. Invest. 109, 1193–1201 (2002)
Skau, M., Pakkenberg, B., Buschard, K. & Bock, T. Linear correlation between the total islet mass and the volume-weighted mean islet volume. Diabetes 50, 1763–1770 (2001)
Bock, T., Pakkenberg, B. & Buschard, K. Increased islet volume but unchanged islet number in ob/ob mice. Diabetes 52, 1716–1722 (2003)
Wu, K. L. et al. Hepatocyte nuclear factor 3β is involved in pancreatic beta-cell-specific transcription of the pdx-1 gene. Mol. Cell. Biol. 17, 6002–6013 (1997)
Freshney, R. I. Culture of Animal Cells: A Manual of Basic Technique (Wiley-Liss, New York, 2000)
Arkle, S., Lee, C. M., Cullen, M. J. & Argent, B. E. Isolation of ducts from the pancreas of copper-deficient rats. Q. J. Exp. Physiol. 71, 249–265 (1986)
Acknowledgements
We thank J. Dubauskaite for zygote injection, G. Kenty for help with fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis, H. Hsieh for technical assistance, and S. Bonner-Weir, A. Regev and members of the Melton laboratory for discussions. D.A.M. is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. Y.D. was supported by EMBO and JDRF postdoctoral fellowships.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing financial interests.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Dor, Y., Brown, J., Martinez, O. et al. Adult pancreatic β-cells are formed by self-duplication rather than stem-cell differentiation. Nature 429, 41–46 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature02520
Received:
Accepted:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature02520
This article is cited by
-
Origins of cancer: ain’t it just mature cells misbehaving?
The EMBO Journal (2024)
-
EZH2 inhibitors promote β-like cell regeneration in young and adult type 1 diabetes donors
Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (2024)
-
Repopulating Kupffer cells originate directly from hematopoietic stem cells
Stem Cell Research & Therapy (2023)
-
A highly sensitive strategy for monitoring real-time proliferation of targeted cell types in vivo
Nature Communications (2023)
-
Reflections on the state of diabetes research and prospects for treatment
Diabetology International (2023)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.