Strom, A.Bonal, C.Ashery-Padan, R.Hashimoto, N.Campos, M. L.Trumpp, A.Noda, T.Kido, Y.Real, F. X.Thorel, F.Herrera, P. L.2007-07-312007-07-312007-07-31200710.1242/dev.02875https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/9966WOS:0002483816000021113017596282Beta-catenin signaling is heavily involved in organogenesis. Here, we investigated how pancreas differentiation, growth and homeostasis are affected following inactivation of an endogenous inhibitor of beta-catenin, adenomatous polyposis coli (Apc). In adult mice, Apc-deficient pancreata were enlarged, solely as a result of hyperplasia of acinar cells, which accumulated beta-catenin, with the sparing of islets. Expression of a target of beta-catenin, the proto-oncogene c-myc (Myc), was increased in acinar cells lacking Apc, suggesting that c-myc expression is essential for hyperplasia. In support of this hypothesis, we found that conditional inactivation of c-myc in pancreata lacking Apc completely reversed the acinar hyperplasia. Apc loss in organs such as the liver, colon and kidney, as well as experimental misexpression of c-myc in pancreatic acinar cells, led to tumor formation with high penetrance. Surprisingly, pancreas tumors failed to develop following conditional pancreas Apc inactivation. In Apc-deficient acini of aged mice, our studies revealed a cessation of their exaggerated proliferation and a reduced expression of c-myc, in spite of the persistent accumulation of beta-catenin. In conclusion, our work shows that beta-catenin modulation of c-myc is an essential regulator of acinar growth control, and unveils an unprecedented example of Apc requirement in the pancreas that is both temporally restricted and cell-specific. This provides new insights into the mechanisms of tumor pathogenesis and tumor suppression in the pancreasUnique mechanisms of growth regulation and tumor suppression upon Apc inactivation in the pancreastext::journal::journal article::research article