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In Vitro Proliferation of Porcine Pancreatic Islet Cells for β-Cell Therapy Applications

Authors :
Guoguang Niu
John P. McQuilling
Yu Zhou
Emmanuel C. Opara
Giuseppe Orlando
Shay Soker
Source :
Journal of Diabetes Research, Vol 2016 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2016.

Abstract

β-Cell replacement through transplantation is the only curative treatment to establish a long-term stable euglycemia in diabetic patients. Owing to the shortage of donor tissue, attempts are being made to develop alternative sources of insulin-secreting cells. Stem cells differentiation and reprograming as well as isolating pancreatic progenitors from different sources are some examples; however, no approach has yet yielded a clinically relevant solution. Dissociated islet cells that are cultured in cell numbers by in vitro proliferation provide a promising platform for redifferentiation towards β-cells phenotype. In this study, we cultured islet-derived cells in vitro and examined the expression of β-cell genes during the proliferation. Islets were isolated from porcine pancreases and enzymatically digested to dissociate the component cells. The cells proliferated well in tissue culture plates and were subcultured for no more than 5 passages. Only 10% of insulin expression, as measured by PCR, was preserved in each passage. High glucose media enhanced insulin expression by about 4–18 fold, suggesting a glucose-dependent effect in the proliferated islet-derived cells. The islet-derived cells also expressed other pancreatic genes such as Pdx1, NeuroD, glucagon, and somatostatin. Taken together, these results indicate that pancreatic islet-derived cells, proliferated in vitro, retained the expression capacity for key pancreatic genes, thus suggesting that the cells may be redifferentiated into insulin-secreting β-like cells.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23146745 and 23146753
Volume :
2016
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Diabetes Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4f81801565b9472ea4e1902883432387
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/5807876