Abstract

Mice deficient in hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 alpha (HNF-1alpha) develop dwarfism, liver dysfunction, and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Liver dysfunction in HNF-1alpha-null mice includes severe hepatic glycogen accumulation and dyslipidemia. The liver dysfunction may appear as soon as 2 weeks after birth. Since the HNF-1alpha-null mice become diabetic 2 weeks after birth, the early onset of the liver dysfunction is unlikely to be due to the diabetic status of the mice. More likely, it is due directly to the deficiency of HNF-1alpha in liver. Although the HNF-1alpha-null mice have an average life span of 1 year, the severe liver phenotype has thwarted attempts to study the pathogenesis of maturity-onset diabetes of the young type 3 (MODY3) and to examine therapeutic strategies for diabetes prevention and treatment in these mice. To circumvent this problem, we have generated a new Hnf-1alpha mutant mouse line, Hnf-1alpha(kin/kin), using gene targeting to inactivate the Hnf-1alpha gene and at the same time, to incorporate the Cre-loxP DNA recombination system into the locus for later revival of the Hnf-1alpha gene in tissues by tissue-specifically expressed Cre recombinase. The Hnf-1alpha(kin/kin) mice in which the expression of HNF-1alpha was inactivated in germ line cells were indistinguishable from the HNF-1alpha-null mice with regard to both the diabetes and liver phenotypes. Intriguingly, when the inactivated Hnf-1alpha gene was revived in liver (hepatic Hnf-1alpha revived) by the Cre recombinase driven by an albumin promoter, the Hnf-1alpha(kin/kin) mice, although severely diabetic, grew normally and did not develop any of the liver dysfunctions. In addition, we showed that the expression of numerous genes in pancreas, including a marker gene for pancreas injury, was affected by liver dysfunction but not by the deficiency of HNF-1alpha in pancreas. Thus, our hepatic-Hnf-1alpha-revived mice may serve as a useful mouse model to study the human MODY3 disorder.

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