| Literature DB >> 30410880 |
Veronica Astro1, Antonio Adamo1.
Abstract
The raising worldwide prevalence of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T1DM and T2DM) solicits the derivation of in vitro methods yielding mature and fully functional β-cells to be used in regenerative medicine. Several protocols to differentiate human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) into human pancreatic β-like cells have recently been developed. These methods, coupled with a bioengineering approach using biocompatible encapsulating devices, have recently led to experimental clinical trials showing great promises to ultimately end the battle of diabetic patients for managing hyperglycemia. However, in vitro differentiation protocols face the challenge of achieving homogenous population of mono-hormonal insulin-secreting mature β-cells. Major epigenetic events such as DNA methylation, post-translational modification of histones and non-coding RNAs expression, orchestrate physiological endocrine pancreas specification into α-, β-, γ-, and δ-cells, both in vivo and in vitro. The dysregulation of such epigenetic processes is associated to multiple pancreatic disorders including diabetes. Understanding the epigenomic and transcriptomic landscape underlying endocrine pancreas development could, therefore, improve in vitro differentiation methods. In this review, we summarize the most effective protocols for in vitro differentiation of hESCs/hiPSCs toward pancreatic β-cells and we discuss the current limitations in the derivation of functional glucose-responsive, insulin-releasing β-cells. Moreover, we focus on the main transcriptional and epigenetic events leading to pancreatic specification and on the applicative potential of novel epigenetic drugs for the establishment of innovative pharmacological therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; epigenetics; in vitro differentiation; regenerative medicine; β-cells
Year: 2018 PMID: 30410880 PMCID: PMC6209628 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2018.00141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Reports describing the differentiation of hESC and hiPSC into pancreatic β-like cells.
| DE | PPs | Immature β-cells | β-like cells | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | hESC/hiPSC lines | Differentiation conditions | DE markers (%) | PDX1+/NKX6.1+(%) | NKX6.1+/C-Peptide+ (%) or NKX6.1+/INS+ (%) | INS+/GCG+(%) or C-Peptide+/GCG+ (%) | Glucose homeostasis restoration | Glucose Stimulated Insulin Release (GSIS) | |
| HUES8hESC, hiPSCs | Spinning flasks | >95%SOX17+ | n.t | NKX6.1+/C-Peptide+ 31–38% | C-Peptide +/GCG+ 8% | NOD-SCID and NRG-Akita mice | Yes | Yes (tested | |
| hESC HI | Adherent on Matrigel+ ALI | n.t | 76% | NKX6.1+/INS+ 40–51% | INS+/GCG+ 21% | NOD-SCIDy (NSG) mice | Yes | Yes (tested | |
| hESC HI, H9 MSC-, BJ-iPSC MEL-1, hiPSC38-2 | Adherent on Matrigel | >93% CXCR4+/CD117+ | n.q | negative | n.q | NSG mice | n.t | Yes (tested | |
| ND-1, ND-2;T1DM patient-derived hiPSCs | Spinning flasks and rotating plate | n.q | 52–79% | NKX6.1+/C-Peptide+ 30% | n.q | NOD-SCID mice | Yes | Yes (tested | |
| MEL-1 | Orbital shaker | n.t | 67–89% | NKX6.1+/INS+ 12% | C-Peptide +/GCG+ 13% | NSG mice | Yes | No (tested | |
| HUVEC-derived hiPSC | Adherent on Matrigel | n.t | n.t. | NKX6.1+/INS+ 30% | INS+/GCG+ 15% | NOD-SCID mice | Yes (only using ERRy overexpressing cells) | Yes (tested | |
| hESC HI, HUES8 | Adherent on Vitronectin+ ALI | 56–86% CXCR4 +/SOX17 + | 39–65% | NKX6.1+/C-Peptide+ 18% | C-Peptide +/GCG+ 10% | NOD-SCID mice | n.t | Yes (tested | |
| hESC HI, HUES8, hiPSCs | Adherent on Matrigel+ suspension or ALI from day 10-13 | n.q | n.t | NKX6.1+/C-Peptide+ in ALI 18% in LA 9% | C-Peptide +/GCG+ in ALI 8% In LA 12% | NOD-SCID mice | Yes | Yes (tested | |
| CyT49 hESC | Orbital shaker | n.t | 75% | n.t | INS+/GCG+ 15% INS+/GCG-30% | NOD-SCID mice | n.t | Yes (tested | |
Epigenetic modulators implemented in protocols for in vitro differentiation into β-like cells.
| Categories | Compound Name | Mechanism of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| HDAC Inhibitors | IDE1 and IDE2 | Induces SOX17 and FOXA2 expression at DE stage | |
| Sodium Butyrate | Induces the expression of DE markers in cooperation with AA | ||
| Valproic acid | Ameliorates the differentiation toward endoderm lineages | ||
| DNA methylation inhibitors | 5-Aza-2-deoxycytidine (5-Aza-DC) | Favors NGN3 expression by inhibiting the DNA methyltransferase (Dnmt) | |
| Increases PDX1 expression by inhibiting Dnmt | |||
| Histone marks modulators | Nicotinamide | Promotes SIRT1-mediated histone demethylase acetylation and increases NKX6.1 expression | |
| BRD7552 | Modulates histone H3 tail modifications that induce PDX1 expression |