Ductal Ngn3-expressing progenitors contribute to adult β cell neogenesis in the pancreas

Christopher Gribben(The Francis Crick Institute), Christopher Lambert(King's College London), Hendrik A. Messal(The Francis Crick Institute), Ella-Louise Hubber(King's College London), Chloe L. Rackham(King's College London), Ian Evans(The Francis Crick Institute), Harry Heimberg(Vrije Universiteit Brussel), Peter M. Jones(King's College London), Rocı́o Sancho(King's College London), Axel Behrens(Institute of Cancer Research)
Cell stem cell
September 2, 2021
Cited by 94Open Access
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Abstract

Ductal cells have been proposed as a source of adult β cell neogenesis, but this has remained controversial. By combining lineage tracing, 3D imaging, and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) approaches, we show that ductal cells contribute to the β cell population over time. Lineage tracing using the Neurogenin3 (Ngn3)-CreERT line identified ductal cells expressing the endocrine master transcription factor Ngn3 that were positive for the δ cell marker somatostatin and occasionally co-expressed insulin. The number of hormone-expressing ductal cells was increased in Akita+/− diabetic mice, and ngn3 heterozygosity accelerated diabetes onset. scRNA-seq of Ngn3 lineage-traced islet cells indicated that duct-derived somatostatin-expressing cells, some of which retained expression of ductal markers, gave rise to β cells. This study identified Ngn3-expressing ductal cells as a source of adult β cell neogenesis in homeostasis and diabetes, suggesting that this mechanism, in addition to β cell proliferation, maintains the adult islet β cell population.


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