| Literature DB >> 26834702 |
Munirah Mohamad Santosa1, Blaise Su Jun Low2, Nicole Min Qian Pek3, Adrian Kee Keong Teo4.
Abstract
In the field of stem cell biology and diabetes, we and others seek to derive mature and functional human pancreatic β cells for disease modeling and cell replacement therapy. Traditionally, knowledge gathered from rodents is extended to human pancreas developmental biology research involving human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs). While much has been learnt from rodent pancreas biology in the early steps toward Pdx1(+) pancreatic progenitors, much less is known about the transition toward Ngn3(+) pancreatic endocrine progenitors. Essentially, the later steps of pancreatic β cell development and maturation remain elusive to date. As a result, the most recent advances in the stem cell and diabetes field have relied upon combinatorial testing of numerous growth factors and chemical compounds in an arbitrary trial-and-error fashion to derive mature and functional human pancreatic β cells from hPSCs. Although this hit-or-miss approach appears to have made some headway in maturing human pancreatic β cells in vitro, its underlying biology is vaguely understood. Therefore, in this mini-review, we discuss some of these late-stage signaling pathways that are involved in human pancreatic β cell differentiation and highlight our current understanding of their relevance in rodent pancreas biology. Our efforts here unravel several novel signaling pathways that can be further studied to shed light on unexplored aspects of rodent pancreas biology. New investigations into these signaling pathways are expected to advance our knowledge in human pancreas developmental biology and to aid in the translation of stem cell biology in the context of diabetes treatments.Entities:
Keywords: beta cell; human; islet; pancreas; pluripotent stem cell
Year: 2016 PMID: 26834702 PMCID: PMC4712272 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2015.00194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1A summary of the pivotal stages of pancreatic differentiation. (A) Mammalian pancreas development based on knowledge from both rodent and human studies. The signaling pathways suggested to be positively regulating the differentiation process are highlighted in green, while those found to be inhibited in order to drive differentiation toward pancreatic lineage are shown in red. (B) An in vitro pancreatic differentiation timecourse generating β-like cells from hPSCs. The signaling pathways (green) and antioxidants (pink) that are positively regulating the differentiation process at each phase of development are highlighted. Stage-specific signaling pathways that are inhibited to drive differentiation toward pancreatic lineage are shown in red. The decreasing doses of RA used during the differentiation process [as described by Rezania et al. (6) and Pagliuca et al. (7)] are represented by the decreasing shades of green. The differing colors co-existing in an aggregate illustrates the heterogeneity of cells prevalent in such a differentiation scheme. While some of the cells will transit from being endocrine progenitors (light orange) to Pdx1+ insulin-producing β-like cells (brown), the end-product will include an assortment of maturing endocrine cell types (represented by orange and light orange).
Summary of some novel signaling pathways perturbed during pancreatic differentiation of hPSCs.
| Molecules | Mechanism | Induction of pancreatic lineage markers | Reference | Humans | Rodents | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TGF-β inhibition | SB431542 | Inhibits ALK 4/5/7 | Upregulates | Nostro et al. ( | √ | ||
| SB431542 + RA | Upregulates | Cho et al. ( | √ | ||||
| TGF-βRI kinase inhibitor IV | Induces pancreatic progenitors from hPSCs | Schultz et al. ( | √ | ||||
| 1 μM ALK5iII | Inhibits ALK5 | Downregulates | Rezania et al. ( | √ | √ | ||
| 10 μM ALK5iII | Pagliuca et al. ( | √ | |||||
| Protein kinase C signaling | 300 nM ILV | Activates PKC | Upregulates gene expression of pancreatic progenitor markers | Chen et al. ( | √ | √ | |
| 500 nM TPB | Upregulates protein expression of FOXA2, PTF1A, HNF6, and NKX6.1 | √ | |||||
| 14 nM PMA | Downregulates protein expression of endoderm markers CDX2 and AFP | √ | |||||
| 50 nM TPB | Activates PKC | Upregulates gene expression of pancreatic lineage markers | Rezania et al. ( | √ | |||
| 500 nM PDBu | Pagliuca et al. ( | √ | |||||
| Low retinoic acid (RA) signaling | 1–3 μM RA | Activates RA receptors | Various | √ | |||
| 3 nM TTNPB | Schulz et al. ( | √ | |||||
| 1 μM → 100 nM → 50 nM RA | Rezania et al. ( | √ | |||||
| 2 μM → 100 nM → 25 nM RA | Pagliuca et al. ( | √ | |||||
| γ-secretase/Notch inhibitor | DAPT | Inhibits Notch signaling | Upregulates | Dror et al. ( | √ | √ | |
| Upregulates | Rezania et al. ( | √ | |||||
| GSiXX | Upregulates expression of β cell maturation genes | Rezania et al. ( | √ | ||||
| GSiXX + T3 | Upregulates NKX6.1+insulin+GCG- β-like cells | Rezania et al. ( | √ | ||||
| 1 μM XXI | Upregulates β cell gene expression | Pagliuca et al. ( | √ | ||||
| T3 | 0.1 μM T3 | Activates MAPK/ERK signaling pathway | Induces rodent pancreatic β cell proliferation | Kim et al. ( | √ | ||
| 1 μM T3 | Upregulates expression of | Rezania et al. ( | √ | ||||
| Enhances co-expression of NKX6.1 and INS protein | Pagliuca et al. ( | ||||||
| AXL | 2 μM BGB324 (R428) | Inhibits AXL | Upregulates MAFA protein expression | Rezania et al. ( | √ | ||
| GAS6 | Activates AXL | Downregulates | Haase et al. ( | √ | |||
| Antioxidants | GPx-1 | Antioxidants | Maintains protein expression of nuclear MAFA in diabetic rodents | Harmon et al. ( | √ | ||
| NAC | Harmon et al. ( | √ | |||||
| Ebselen | Mahadevan et al. ( | √ | |||||
| 1–2 mM NAC | Upregulates nuclear MAFA protein expression | Rezania et al. ( | √ | ||||
| 0.25 mM vitamin C | Generates mature and functional human pancreatic β cells | Pagliuca et al. ( | √ | ||||
| Betacellulin | BTC | Binds to ErbB-1 and ErbB-4 receptors to initiate PI3K/Akt, MAPK, STAT, and mTOR signaling pathways | Upregulates insulin secretion | Dahlhoff et al. ( | √ | ||
| Upregulates mRNA and protein expression of IRS-2 | Oh et al. ( | √ | |||||
| Induces | Brun et al. ( | √ | |||||
| Sustains | Cho et al. ( | √ | |||||
| 10 ng/ml BTC | Upregulates | Thowfeequ et al. ( | √ | ||||
| 20 ng/ml BTC | Induces pancreatic differentiation | Pagliuca et al. ( | √ | ||||
| 50 ng/ml EGF | Preserves cell mass | Schulz et al. ( | √ | ||||
BTC, Betacellulin; DAPT, .