Abstract
IA-1, an insulinoma-associated cDNA-1, encodes a zinc-finger DNA-binding protein originally isolated from a human insulinoma subtraction library. To demonstrate the restriction of IA-1 gene expression in human fetal pancreata of different gestational stages and to determine whether the expression of IA-1 gene is associated with rat AR42J cell differentiation into insulin-positive cells. To examine whether the IA-1 gene is associated with pancreatic endocrine cell differentiation, we used a rat pancreatic amphicrine cell line, AR42J, to investigate whether the expression of the IA-1 gene coincides with AR42J cells converting into either endocrine or exocrine lineage. We also examined a set of islet transcription factors that regulate key differentiation steps involved in activating the genes that confer the specialized functions of terminally differentiated pancreatic islet cells. When the AR42J cells were converted into insulin-positive cells induced by GLP-1, insulinoma conditioned-medium, or both, we observed a significant elevated expression of mRNA for IA-1 and islet-specific transcription factors such as Pdx-1, NeuroD/beta2, and Nkx6.1. In contrast, dramatically decreased expression of mRNA for IA-1 and islet-specific transcription factors was displayed when AR42J cells were converted into the acinar-like phenotype by dexamethasone. IA-1 gene was shown to be developmentally regulated in fetal pancreatic cells, and its expression pattern is consistent with parallel changes in islet-specific transcription factors during the endocrine differentiation of AR42J cells.
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