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 Developmental biology of the pancreas Slack JMDevelopment  1995[Jun]; 121 (6): 1569-80The pancreas is an organ containing two distinct populations of cells, the  exocrine cells that secrete enzymes into the digestive tract, and the endocrine  cells that secrete hormones into the bloodstream. It arises from the endoderm as  a dorsal and a ventral bud which fuse together to form the single organ. Mammals,  birds, reptiles and amphibians have a pancreas with similar histology and mode of  development, while in some fish, the islet cells are segregated as Brockmann  bodies. Invertebrates do not have a pancreas, but comparable endocrine cells may  be found in the gut or the brain. The early pancreatic bud shows uniform  expression of the homeobox gene IPF-1 (also known as IDX-1, STF-1 or PDX), which  when mutated to inactivity leads to total absence of the organ. The occurrence of  heterotopic pancreas in the embryo, and also the metaplasias that can be  displayed by a regenerating pancreas in the adult, both suggest that only a few  gene products distinguish the pancreatic cell state from that of the surrounding  tissues of duodenum, gall bladder and liver. In the developing pancreatic buds,  the endocrine cells start to differentiate before the exocrine cells, and  co-expression of different hormones by the same cell is often observed at early  stages. Although pancreatic endocrine cells produce many gene products also  characteristic of neurons, evidence from in vitro cultures and from quailchick  grafts shows that they are of endogenous and not of neural crest origin.  Observational studies suggest strongly that both endocrine and exocrine cells  arise from the same endodermal rudiment. Development of the pancreas in embryonic  life requires a trophic stimulus from the associated mesenchyme. In postnatal  life, all cell types in the pancreas continue to grow. Destruction of acinar  tissue by duct ligation or ethionine treatment is followed by rapid regeneration.  Surgical removal of parts of the pancreas is followed by moderate but incomplete  regeneration of both acini and islets. Poisoning with alloxan or streptozotocin  can lead to permanent depletion of beta cells. Although the cell kinetics of the  pancreas are not understood, it seems likely that there is a continuous slow  turnover of cells, fed from a stem cells population in the ducts, and that the  controls on the production rate of each cell type are local rather than systemic.|Animals[MESH]|Embryonic Induction/physiology[MESH]|Endoderm/physiology[MESH]|Gene Expression[MESH]|Genes, Homeobox[MESH]|Mesoderm/physiology[MESH]|Mice[MESH]|Mice, Transgenic[MESH]|Pancreas/*embryology/growth & development[MESH]|Vertebrates[MESH]
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