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Acinar phenotype is preserved in human exocrine pancreas cells cultured at low temperature: implications for lineage-tracing of β-cell neogenesis
- Source :
- Bioscience Reports
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- In vitro cultured pancreatic acinar cells rapidly differentiate. Low temperature exposure prevents this process and improves the efficiency of acinar cell labelling with adenovirus vectors. This may help in tracing β-cell neogenesis from human pancreatic acinar cells.<br />The regenerative medicine field is expanding with great successes in laboratory and preclinical settings. Pancreatic acinar cells in diabetic mice were recently converted into β-cells by treatment with ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF). This suggests that human acinar cells might become a cornerstone for diabetes cell therapy in the future, if they can also be converted into glucose-responsive insulin-producing cells. Presently, studying pancreatic acinar cell biology in vitro is limited by their high plasticity, as they rapidly lose their phenotype and spontaneously transdifferentiate to a duct-like phenotype in culture. We questioned whether human pancreatic acinar cell phenotype could be preserved in vitro by physico-chemical manipulations and whether this could be valuable in the study of β-cell neogenesis. We found that culture at low temperature (4°C) resulted in the maintenance of morphological and molecular acinar cell characteristics. Specifically, chilled acinar cells did not form the spherical clusters observed in controls (culture at 37°C), and they maintained high levels of acinar-specific transcripts and proteins. Five-day chilled acinar cells still transdifferentiated into duct-like cells upon transfer to 37°C. Moreover, adenoviral-mediated gene transfer evidenced an active Amylase promoter in the 7-day chilled acinar cells, and transduction performed in chilled conditions improved acinar cell labelling. Together, our findings indicate the maintenance of human pancreatic acinar cell phenotype at low temperature and the possibility to efficiently label acinar cells, which opens new perspectives for the study of human acinar-to-β-cell transdifferentiation.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
acinar cells
transdifferentiation
Cellular differentiation
Cell Culture Techniques
Biochemistry
Neogenesis
Cell therapy
Mice
Insulin-Secreting Cells
Promoter Regions, Genetic
Cells, Cultured
biology
Transdifferentiation
Cell Differentiation
acinar cell
Original Papers
Pancreas, Exocrine
β-cell
Cell biology
Cold Temperature
medicine.anatomical_structure
Phenotype
Cell Transdifferentiation
Amylases
hypothermic
Pancreas
neogenesis
medicine.medical_specialty
Biophysics
digestive system
03 medical and health sciences
lineage tracing
stomatognathic system
Internal medicine
medicine
Acinar cell
chilled
Animals
Humans
Cell Lineage
Molecular Biology
Original Paper
Cell Biology
biology.organism_classification
beta cells
030104 developmental biology
Endocrinology
Cell culture
Transcriptome
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15734935
- Volume :
- 36
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Bioscience reports
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....38a178009dc74dce75f95ab0efbff9ee