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Islet Cells Serve as Cells of Origin of Pancreatic Gastrin-Positive Endocrine Tumors
Author(s) -
Rémy Bonnavion,
Romain Teinturier,
Rami Jaafar,
Doriane Ripoche,
Emmanuelle Leteurtre,
YuanJia Chen,
Jens F. Rehfeld,
Florian Lépinasse,
Valérie Hervieu,
François Pattou,
MarieChristine Vantyghem,
JeanYves Scoazec,
Philippe Bertolino,
Chang Zhang
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.00302-15
Subject(s) - gastrin , enteroendocrine cell , biology , pancreas , progenitor cell , multiple endocrine neoplasia , gastrinoma , medicine , pancreatic polypeptide , men1 , endocrinology , pancreatic islets , neuroendocrine cell , histogenesis , endocrine system , cancer research , glucagon , stem cell , islet , hormone , microbiology and biotechnology , immunohistochemistry , insulin , immunology , biochemistry , secretion , gene
The cells of origin of pancreatic gastrinomas remain an enigma, since no gastrin-expressing cells are found in the normal adult pancreas. It was proposed that the cellular origin of pancreatic gastrinomas may come from either the pancreatic cells themselves or gastrin-expressing cells which have migrated from the duodenum. In the current study, we further characterized previously described transient pancreatic gastrin-expressing cells using cell lineage tracing in a pan-pancreatic progenitor and a pancreatic endocrine progenitor model. We provide evidence showing that pancreatic gastrin-expressing cells, found from embryonic day 12.5 until postnatal day 7, are derived from pancreatic Ptf1a+ and neurogenin 3-expressing (Ngn3+ ) progenitors. Importantly, the majority of them coexpress glucagon, with 4% coexpressing insulin, indicating that they are a temporary subpopulation of both alpha and beta cells. Interestingly,Men1 disruption in both Ngn3 progenitors and beta and alpha cells resulted in the development of pancreatic gastrin-expressing tumors, suggesting that the latter developed from islet cells. Finally, we detected gastrin expression using three human cohorts with pancreatic endocrine tumors (pNETs) that have not been diagnosed as gastrinomas (in 9/34 pNETs from 6/14 patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1, in 5/35 sporadic nonfunctioning pNETs, and in 2/20 sporadic insulinomas), consistent with observations made in mouse models. Our work provides insight into the histogenesis of pancreatic gastrin-expressing tumors.

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