4.2 Article

Jagged1 is a competitive inhibitor of Notch signaling in the embryonic pancreas

Journal

MECHANISMS OF DEVELOPMENT
Volume 126, Issue 8-9, Pages 687-699

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mod.2009.05.005

Keywords

Notch signaling; Pancreas development; Jagged1

Funding

  1. University of Pennsylvania Diabetes Center [P30DK19525]
  2. Morphology Core of the Penn Center for Molecular Studies in Digestive and Liver Disease [P30DK50306]
  3. Flow Cytometry and Cell Sorting Resource Laboratory
  4. NIDDK [DK55342, DK61226, DK02796]

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Pancreatic endocrine cells originate from precursors that express the transcription factor Neurogenin3 (Ngn3). Ngn3 expression is repressed by active Notch signaling. Accordingly, mice with Notch signaling pathway mutations display increased Ngn3 expression and endocrine cell lineage allocation. To determine how the Notch ligand Jagged1 (Jag1) functions during pancreas development, we deleted Jag1 in foregut endoderm and examined postnatal and embryonic endocrine cells and precursors. Postnatal Jag1 mutants display increased Ngn3 expression, cc-cell mass, and endocrine cell percentage, similar to the early embryonic phenotype of Dill and Rbpj mutants. However, in sharp contrast to postnatal animals, Jag1-deficient embryos display increased expression of Notch transcriptional targets and decreased Ngn3 expression, resulting in reduced endocrine lineage allocation. Jag1 acts as an inhibitor of Notch signaling during embryonic pancreas development but an activator of Notch signaling postnatally Expression of the Notch modifier Manic Fringe (Mfng) is limited to endocrine precursors, providing a possible explanation for the inhibition of Notch signaling by Jag1 during mid-gestation embryonic pancreas development. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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