| Literature DB >> 30594258 |
Hussain Md Shahjalal1,2, Ahmed Abdal Dayem1, Kyung Min Lim1, Tak-Il Jeon1, Ssang-Goo Cho3.
Abstract
Human embryonic stem cells (hESC) and induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) are considered attractive sources of pancreatic β cells and islet organoids. Recently, several reports presented that hESC/iPSC-derived cells enriched with specific transcription factors can form glucose-responsive insulin-secreting cells in vitro and transplantation of these cells ameliorates hyperglycemia in diabetic mice. However, the glucose-stimulated insulin-secreting capacity of these cells is lower than that of endogenous islets, suggesting the need to improve induction procedures. One of the critical problems facing in vivo maturation of hESC/iPSC-derived cells is their low survival rate after transplantation, although this rate increases when the implanted pancreatic cells are encapsulated to avoid the immune response. Several groups have also reported on the generation of hESC/iPSC-derived islet-like organoids, but development of techniques for complete islet structures with the eventual generation of vascularized constructs remains a major challenge to their application in regenerative therapies. Many issues also need to be addressed before the successful clinical application of hESC/iPSC-derived cells or islet organoids. In this review, we summarize advances in the generation of hESC/iPSC-derived pancreatic β cells or islet organoids and discuss the limitations and challenges for their successful therapeutic application in diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: Differentiation; Embryonic stem cells (ESC); Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC); Islet organoids; Pancreatic β cell; Transplantation; β Cell maturation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30594258 PMCID: PMC6310974 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-018-1099-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Differentiation, maturation, and function of pancreatic β cells derived from hESC/ iPSC. Insulin-positive polyhormonal cells mostly formed in many in vitro cell culture protocols which show limited or no GSIS (a). Alternatively, EP cells were formed from hESC/iPSC in a monolayer and/or rotating suspension culture, and transplantation of these cells generated islet-like ECs that exhibited GSIS and could reverse hyperglycemia (b). Recently, pancreatic β-like cells expressing mature β cell markers and exhibiting GSIS in vitro were generated in either low adhesion culture or rotating suspension culture; after transplantation, these cells underwent further maturation, secreted insulin in response to glucose, and ameliorated hyperglycemia in diabetic mice (c). GSIS, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion; AFP, hepatic progenitor cells expressing AFP; CDX2, intestinal progenitor cells expressing CDX2; PP, pancreatic progenitor; EP, endocrine precursor; INS, β-like cells expressing insulin; GCG, α cells expressing glucagon; SST, δ cells expressing somatostatin
Fig. 2Generation of iPSCs from various somatic cells. iPSC generation carried out via viral-based and non-viral-based methods are summarized
Generation of insulin-positive β-like cells from hESC/iPSC, their maturation, and functions in vitro and in vivo
| References | Differentiation condition | Cell types induced | Percent insulin + cells | GSIS | Recipients/transplantation site | Amelioration of hyperglycemia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| D’Amour et al. [ | On low-density MEFs | INS+, GCG+, SST+, PPY+, GHRL+ | 7.3% (3–12%) | No | n.a. | n.d. |
| Jiang et al. [ | On Matrigel | INS+, GCG+, SST+ [n.t: PPY+, GHRL+] | > 15% | Yes (in vitro) | BALB/c nude mice/kidney capsule | Yes |
| Shim et al. [ | Suspension culture | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | n.d. | n.d. | BALB/c nude mice/kidney capsule | Yes |
| Eshpeter et al. [ | On Matrigel | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | 5.3% | Yes (in vivo) | Diabetic C57BL6 Rag −1/−1 mice/kidney capsule | No |
| Kroon et al. [ | On low-density MEFs | INS+, GCG+, SST+, PPY+, GHRL+ | n.d. | Yes (in vivo) | SCID-beige mice/epididymal fat pad | Yes |
| Chen et al. [ | On low-density MEFs | INS+, GCG+, SST+, [n.t: PPY+, GHRL+] | 0.8 ± 0.4% | Low (in vitro) | CD1 nude mice/kidney capsule | n.d. |
| Zhang et al. [ | On Matrigel | INS+, SST+ | 25% | Yes (in vitro) | n.a. | n.d. |
| Kunisada et al. [ | On low-density MEFs | INS+, GCG+, SST+, GHRL+ | 11.8% (8.0–16.9%) | No | n.a. | n.d. |
| Rezania et al. [ | Matrigel/suspension culture (stirred) | INS+, GCG+, SST+, PPY+ | ~ 10% | Yes (in vivo) | SCID-beige and STZ-diabetic mice/kidney capsule | Yes |
| Schulz et al. [ | Suspension (aggregates) | INS+, GCG+, SST+, [n.t: PPY+, GHRL+] | n.d. | Yes (in vivo) | SCID-beige mice/epididymal fat pad | Yes |
| Rezania et al. [ | Matrigel/suspension culture (stirred) | INS+, GCG+, SST+, PPY+, GHRL+ | ~ 55–60% (post-transplant) | Yes (in vivo) | SCID-beige and STZ-diabetic mice/subcutaneous with encapsulation device | Yes |
| Bruin et al. [ | Matrigel/suspension culture (stirred) | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | n.d. | Yes (in vivo) | SCID-beige and STZ-diabetic mice/kidney capsule and subcutaneous with encapsulation device | Yes |
| Shahjalal et al. [ | On Synthemax (xeno-free) | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | 5–8% | Yes (in vitro) | n.a. | n.d. |
| Rezania et al. [ | Planar culture/air-liquid interface culture | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | ~ 50% | Yes (in vitro and in vivo) | Non-diabetic and STZ-diabetic mice/kidney capsule | Yes |
| Pagliuca et al. [ | Suspension culture on a stir plate | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | > 30% | Yes (in vitro and in vivo) | SCID-beige and diabetic mice (NRG-Akita)/kidney capsule | Yes |
| Russ et al. [ | Low-adherence plates | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | ~ 60% | Yes (in vitro and in vivo) | STZ-diabetic NOD mice/kidney capsule | Yes |
| Agulnic et al. [ | Suspension culture | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | 40–50% | Yes (in vivo) | SCID-beige mice/subcutaneous with encapsulation device | n.d. |
| Toyoda et al. [ | On Matrigel/low adhesion plate | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | n.d. | Yes (in vivo) | NOD–SCID mice/kidney subcapsule | n.d. |
| Millman et al. [ | On Matrigel/Spinner flasks on a stir plate | INS+, GCG+[n.t..: SST+] | 24–27% | Yes (in vitro and in vivo) | ND-SCID mice and alloxan-induced diabetic mice/kidney capsule | Yes |
| Manzar et al. [ | Matrigel/3D culture | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | ~ 56% | Low (in vitro) | Immunodeficient STZ-diabetic mice/shoulder region | Yes |
| Yabe et al. [ | On Matrigel/aggregate on ultra-low adhesion plate | INS+, GCG+, SST+ | 30–33.6% | Yes (in vitro) | STZ-diabetic NOD-SCID mice/kidney capsules | Yes |
Percentages of insulin-positive cells, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS), and in vivo functions reported from various studies are summarized
MEFs, mouse embryonic fibroblasts; INS+, insulin-positive cells; GCG+, glucagon-positive cells; SST+, somatostatin-positive cells; PPY+, pancreatic polypeptide-positive cells; GHRL+, ghrelin-positive cells; n.t., not tested; n.a., not applied; n.d., not determined
Fig. 3Schematic of fabrication processes for islet-like organoids, adopted and modified from Candiello et al. [82] and Takahashi et al. [87]. a Generation of hESC-derived islet spheroids and islet-like organoids on Amikagel hydrogel platform. Pre-differentiated hESC-derived pancreatic progenitor cells (hESC-PPs) on 2D Matrigel were harvested and then seeded onto the Amikagel hydrogel platform to either form homogenous islet spheroids or be combined with endothelial cells (HUVEC) to form endothelialized heterogeneous islet-like organoids. Several other scaffold-based strategies have also been applied to generate hESC-derived islet-like organoids such as collagen-Matrigel scaffolds. b Generation of vascularized islet-like organoids in self-condensation culture. In this process, isolated adult mouse/human islets or hiPSC-derived pancreatic tissues were co-cultured with endothelial cells (HUVECs) and human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). In the beginning, the cells were scattered throughout the culture well, and then, they began moving towards the center of the well to form condensed tissue. Each condensed tissue contained pancreatic islets with endothelial cells surrounding them
Fig. 4Methods for implanting hESC/iPSC-derived pancreatic cells. Two different methods have been applied. In one method, hESC/iPSC-derived pancreatic cells are implanted directly into transplantation sites or into pre-developed vascularized sites of diabetic and/or non-diabetic SCID mice (a). In another method, hESC/iPSC-derived pancreatic cells encapsulated in immunoprotective semipermeable devices are implanted into ectopic sites of SCID-Beige and/or diabetic mice (b). Oxygen, nutrients, insulin, and glucose can pass through the membranes of the devices to promote the survival, differentiation, maturation, and glucose-responsive insulin secretion of the encapsulated pancreatic cells following implantation into the host mice. In addition, vasculogenesis occurs around the devices, supporting secretion of insulin from the differentiated β cells in response to changes in glucose concentrations. In contrast, immune cells or molecules such as antibodies and complements cannot pass through the membranes, preventing immune rejection or autoimmune responses against the cells
Standard criteria for designing and performing future preclinical studies in vitro and in vivo
| Preclinical tool | Pros | Cons (challenges) | Possible improvements |
|---|---|---|---|
| - NOD mouse is ideal for studying type 1 diabetes and the characterization of the immunopathology of the disease. | - Some disease susceptibility loci in NOD mouse have no marked impact in human disease. | - Applying humanized mouse model having the components of the human immune system. | |
| Stem cell quality | - PSCs could obviate the hurdles of islet application such as lack of donors and weak secretion of insulin post-implantation. | - Generation of iPSCs using integrative or viral-based methods hinders their clinical application in diabetes therapy. | - Using non-integrative and safe methods for the generation of iPSCs. |
| Organoid/spheroid culture | - Organoid/spheroid culture allows a detailed understanding of diabetes pathogenicity, molecular mechanisms, and disease model and provides a useful tool for drug screening. | - Application of animal-derived ECM such as Matrigel hampers the further application of generated organoids in the clinic. | - Designing suitable safe xenogeneic free scaffolds (physical cues) with growth factors (biochemical cues) for the generation of stem cell niche. |
| Differentiation methods | Various differentiation protocols are developed for the generation of insulin-producing β-like cells from PSCs in either monolayer or 3D culture using a cocktail of various chemicals, growth factors, inhibitors, and cytokines in order to emulate the in vivo system. | - Differentiation protocols depend on agents of high costs. | - Characterizing the reproducibility of the current β cell differentiation protocols from PSCs. |
| Transplantation devices | - Encapsulation devices used for cell transplantation, such as semipermeable capsule or membrane, possess various functions [ | - The encapsulation devices need the application of immune modulating agents. | - Applying suitable agents with immune modulating functions, summarized previously [ |