| Literature DB >> 27940875 |
Mingqi Xie1, Haifeng Ye2, Hui Wang1, Ghislaine Charpin-El Hamri3, Claude Lormeau1,4, Pratik Saxena1, Jörg Stelling5,4, Martin Fussenegger5,6.
Abstract
Chronically deregulated blood-glucose concentrations in diabetes mellitus result from a loss of pancreatic insulin-producing β cells (type 1 diabetes, T1D) or from impaired insulin sensitivity of body cells and glucose-stimulated insulin release (type 2 diabetes, T2D). Here, we show that therapeutically applicable β-cell-mimetic designer cells can be established by minimal engineering of human cells. We achieved glucose responsiveness by a synthetic circuit that couples glycolysis-mediated calcium entry to an excitation-transcription system controlling therapeutic transgene expression. Implanted circuit-carrying cells corrected insulin deficiency and self-sufficiently abolished persistent hyperglycemia in T1D mice. Similarly, glucose-inducible glucagon-like peptide 1 transcription improved endogenous glucose-stimulated insulin release and glucose tolerance in T2D mice. These systems may enable a combination of diagnosis and treatment for diabetes mellitus therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27940875 DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf4006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728