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In vitro proliferation of cells derived from adult human beta-cells revealed by cell-lineage tracing.

Authors :
Russ HA
Bar Y
Ravassard P
Efrat S
Source :
Diabetes [Diabetes] 2008 Jun; Vol. 57 (6), pp. 1575-83. Date of Electronic Publication: 2008 Mar 03.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Objective: Expansion of insulin-producing beta-cells from adult human islets could alleviate donor shortage for cell-replacement therapy of diabetes. A major obstacle to development of effective expansion protocols is the rapid loss of beta-cell markers in the cultured cells. Here, we report a genetic cell-lineage tracing approach for following the fate of cultured beta-cells.<br />Research Design and Methods: Cells dissociated from isolated human islets were infected with two lentiviruses, one expressing Cre recombinase under control of the insulin promoter and the other, a reporter cassette with the structure cytomegalovirus promoter-loxP-DsRed2-loxP-eGFP.<br />Results: Beta-cells were efficiently and specifically labeled by the dual virus system. Label(+), insulin(-) cells derived from beta-cells were shown to proliferate for a maximum of 16 population doublings, with an approximate doubling time of 7 days. Isolated labeled cells could be expanded in the absence of other pancreas cell types if provided with medium conditioned by pancreatic non-beta-cells. Analysis of mouse islet cells by the same method revealed a much lower proliferation of labeled cells under similar culture conditions.<br />Conclusions: Our findings provide direct evidence for survival and dedifferentiation of cultured adult human beta-cells and demonstrate that the dedifferentiated cells significantly proliferate in vitro. The findings confirm the difference between mouse and human beta-cell proliferation under our culture conditions. These findings demonstrate the feasibility of cell-specific labeling of cultured primary human cells using a genetic recombination approach that was previously restricted to transgenic animals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1939-327X
Volume :
57
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Diabetes
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18316362
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2337/db07-1283