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The Adult Pituitary Shows Stem/Progenitor Cell Activation in Response to Injury and Is Capable of Regeneration

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posted on 2013-11-15, 00:00 authored by Qiuli Fu, Lies Gremeaux, Raul M. Luque, Daisy Liekens, Jianghai Chen, Thorsten Buch, Ari Waisman, Rhonda Kineman, Hugo Vankelecom
The pituitary gland constitutes, together with the hypothalamus, the regulatory core of the endocrine system. Whether the gland is capable of cell regeneration after injury, in particular when suffered at adult age, is unknown. To investigate the adult pituitary’s regenerative capacity and the response of its stem/progenitor cell compartment to damage, we constructed a transgenic mousemodelto conditionally destroy pituitary cells. GHCre/iDTR mice express diphtheria toxin (DT) receptor after transcriptional activation by Cre recombinase, which is driven by the GH promoter. Treatment withDTfor 3dleads to gradualGH (somatotrope) cell obliteration with a final ablation grade of 80–90%1wk later. The stem/progenitor cell-clustering side population promptly expands after injury, concordant with the immediate increase in Sox2 stem/progenitor cells. In addition, folliculo-stellate cells, previously designated as pituitary stem/progenitor cells and significantly overlapping with Sox2 cells, also increase in abundance. In situ examination reveals expansion of the Sox2 marginal-zone niche and appearance of remarkable Sox2 cells that contain GH. When mice are left after the DT-provoked lesion,GH cells considerably regenerate during the following months. Double Sox2 /GH cells are observed throughout the regenerative period, suggesting recovery of somatotropes from stem/progenitor cells, as further supported by 5-ethynyl-2 -deoxyuridine (EdU) pulse-chase lineage tracing. In conclusion, our study demonstrates that the adult pituitary gland holds regenerative competence and that tissue repair follows prompt activation and plausible involvement of the stem/progenitor cells.

Funding

This work was supported by the Fund for Scientific Research- Flanders (Belgium) (FWO-Vlaanderen), the Research Fund (Onderzoeksfonds) of the Katholieke Universiteit (KU) Leuven, Joint Research of the FWO and MOST (Ministry of Science and Technology, P.R. China), the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (BU1410), the Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia e Innovacion of Spain (RYC-2007-00186 and BFU2008-01136/BFI), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Project 30500248). Q.F. receives a Selective Bilateral Agreement Scholarship (KU Leuven) and L.G. is a Research Fellow of the FWO.

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Publisher Statement

Post print version of article may differ from published version. The definitive version is available through Endocrine Society at DOI: 10.1210/en.2012-1152

Publisher

Endocrine Society

Language

  • en_US

issn

0013-7227

Issue date

2012-07-01

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