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Insulin-promoter-factor 1 is required for pancreas development in mice Jörgen Jonsson, Lena Carlsson, Thomas Edlund* & Helena Edlund
Department
of Microbiology, University of Umeå, S-901 87 Umeå,
Sweden
*To whom correspondence should be
addressed.
THE mammalian pancreas is a mixed exocrine and endocrine gland that, in most
species, arises from ventral and dorsal buds which subsequently merge to form the
pancreas. In both mouse and rat the first histological sign of morphogenesis of the
dorsal pancreas is a dorsal evagination of the duodenum at the level of the liver at
around the 2225-somite stage, and shortly thereafter a ventral evagination appears
as a derivative of the liver diverticulum13. Low levels of insulin
gene transcripts are already present and restricted to the dorsal foregut endoderm at 20
somites, suggesting that pancreas- or insulin gene-specific transcriptional factors are
present in this region before the onset of morphogenesis4. Insulin-promoter-factor 1
(IPF1) is a homeodomain protein which, in the adult mouse pancreas, is selectively
expressed in the -cells and binds to and transactivates the insulin
promoter5. In mouse embryos, IPF1 expression is restricted to the
developing pancreatic anlagen and is initiated when the foregut endoderm is committed to
a pancreatic fate5. We now show that mice homozygous for a targeted
mutation in the Ipf1 gene selectively lack a pancreas. The mutant pups survive
fetal development but die within a few days after birth. The gastrointestinal part and
all other internal organs were normal in appearance. No pancreatic tissue and no ectopic
expression of insulin or pancreatic amylase could be detected in mutant embryos and
neonates. These findings show that IPF1 is needed for the formation of the pancreas and
suggest that it acts to determine the fate of common pancreatic precursor cells and/ or
to regulate their propagation.
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