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Matters arising: Insufficient evidence that pancreatic β cells are derived from adult ductal Neurog3-expressing progenitors

Authors

  • J. Magenheim
  • M.A. Maestro
  • N. Sharon
  • P.L. Herrera
  • L.C. Murtaugh
  • J. Kopp
  • M. Sander
  • G. Gu
  • D.A. Melton
  • J. Ferrer
  • Y. Dor

Journal

  • Cell Stem Cell

Citation

  • Cell Stem Cell 30 (4): 488-497

Abstract

  • Understanding the origin of pancreatic β cells has profound implications for regenerative therapies in diabetes. For over a century, it was widely held that adult pancreatic duct cells act as endocrine progenitors, but lineage-tracing experiments challenged this dogma. Gribben et al. recently used two existing lineage-tracing models and single-cell RNA sequencing to conclude that adult pancreatic ducts contain endocrine progenitors that differentiate to insulin-expressing β cells at a physiologically important rate. We now offer an alternative interpretation of these experiments. Our data indicate that the two Cre lines that were used directly label adult islet somatostatin-producing ∂ cells, which precludes their use to assess whether β cells originate from duct cells. Furthermore, many labeled ∂ cells, which have an elongated neuron-like shape, were likely misclassified as β cells because insulin-somatostatin coimmunolocalizations were not used. We conclude that most evidence so far indicates that endocrine and exocrine lineage borders are rarely crossed in the adult pancreas.


DOI

doi:10.1016/j.stem.2023.03.003