|
|
|
||||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search | |||||
The fully linked HTML version of this article has now been published.
Insulin-secreting
This article has been cited by other articles:
JCS ePress
online publication date 19 Dec 2006
doi: 10.1242/jcs.03330
This Article ![]()
![]()
Full Text (PDF)
![]()
OA
All Versions of this Article:
jcs.03330v1
120/2/239
most recent![]()
Alert me when this article is cited
![]()
Alert me if a correction is posted
![]()
Services ![]()
![]()
Email this article to a friend
![]()
Similar articles in this journal
![]()
Similar articles in PubMed
![]()
Alert me to new issues of the journal
![]()
Download to citation manager
![]()
![]()
Citing Articles ![]()
![]()
Citing Articles via HighWire
![]()
Citing Articles via Google Scholar
![]()
Google Scholar ![]()
![]()
Articles by Dutton, J. R. ![]()
Articles by Slack, J. M.W. ![]()
Search for Related Content
![]()
PubMed ![]()
![]()
PubMed Citation
![]()
Articles by Dutton, J. R.
![]()
Articles by Slack, J. M.W.
![]()
Social Bookmarking ![]()
![]()
What's this?
Research Article
cells occur naturally in extrahepatic bile ducts of mice
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: j.m.w.slack{at}bath.ac.uk)
cells were thought to reside only in the pancreas. Here, we show that
cells are also present in the extra-hepatic bile ducts of mice. They are characterised by insulin and C-peptide content, the presence of secretory granules that are immunoreactive for insulin, and the ducts exhibit glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Genetic lineage labelling shows that these
cells arise from the liver domain rather than the pancreas and, by histological study, they appear to be formed directly from the bile duct epithelium in late embryogenesis. Other endocrine cell types (producing somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide) are also found in close association with the bile-duct-derived
cells, but exocrine pancreatic tissue is not present. This discovery of
cells outside the mammalian pancreas has implications for regenerative medicine, indicating that biliary epithelium might offer a new source of
cells for the treatment of diabetes. The finding also has evolutionary significance, because it is known that certain basal vertebrates usually form all of their
cells from the bile ducts. The mammalian bile-duct-derived
cells might therefore represent an extant trace of the evolutionary origin of the vertebrate
cell.
![]()
CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter What's this?
![]()
![]()

![]()
![]()
![]()
M. Nagaya, H. Katsuta, H. Kaneto, S. Bonner-Weir, and G. C Weir
Adult mouse intrahepatic biliary epithelial cells induced in vitro to become insulin-producing cells
J. Endocrinol.,
April 1, 2009;
201(1):
37 - 47.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
![]()
© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2006