| Literature DB >> 33828531 |
Diego Balboa1, Diepiriye G Iworima2,3, Timothy J Kieffer2,3,4.
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus is characterized by elevated levels of blood glucose and is ultimately caused by insufficient insulin production from pancreatic beta cells. Different research models have been utilized to unravel the molecular mechanisms leading to the onset of diabetes. The generation of pancreatic endocrine cells from human pluripotent stem cells constitutes an approach to study genetic defects leading to impaired beta cell development and function. Here, we review the recent progress in generating and characterizing functional stem cell-derived beta cells. We summarize the diabetes disease modeling possibilities that stem cells offer and the challenges that lie ahead to further improve these models.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; genetic defects; insulin; insulin secretion; modeling; stem cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33828531 PMCID: PMC8020750 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.642152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Genetic defects leading to dysregulated beta cell insulin secretion.
| Mechanism affected | Genes | Impact of genetic defect | Type of disease | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Reduced or increased glucokinase activity results in abnormal glycolytic flux, ATP generation, and insulin secretion | ND, MODY, T2D, CHI | ( |
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| Loss of function mutations are associated with reduced fasting glycemia | T2D | ( | |
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| Loss of function mutations result in impaired glucose uptake | ND, T2D | ( | |
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| Abnormal silencing of HK1 in beta-cells results in increased glycolytic flux, ATP generation and insulin secretion | CHI | ( | |
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| Promoter mutations impair SLC16A1 silencing in beta-cells, resulting in abnormal pyruvate uptake, increased ATP generation, and insulin secretion | CHI | ( | |
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| Gain of function mutations result in increased entrance of glutamate in TCA cycle, increased ATP generation, and insulin secretion | CHI | ( | |
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| Loss of function mutations result in abnormal activation of GLUD1, increased glutamate into TCA, ATP generation, and insulin secretion | CHI | ( | |
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| Gain or loss of function mutations alter the mitochondrial uncoupling activity of UCP2, resulting in abnormal ATP generation and insulin secretion | T2D, CHI | ( | |
| mtDNA | Mitochondrial DNA mutations impair oxidative phosphorylation, ATP generation, and insulin secretion | – | ( | |
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| Gain or loss of function mutations result in abnormal closure or opening of the channel, altered membrane depolarization, and insulin secretion | ND, MODY, T2D, CHI | ( |
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| Gain or loss of function mutations result in abnormal closure or opening of the channel, altered membrane depolarization, and insulin secretion | ND, MODY, T2D, CHI | ( | |
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| Genetic variants in this locus are associated with T2D risk. | T2D | ( | |
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| Genetic variants in this locus are associated with lower fasting glucose levels. Altered GLP-1 signaling affects amplification of insulin secretion. | T2D | ( |
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| Genetic variants associated with reduced GIP signaling, impair incretin-mediated amplification of insulin secretion. | T2D | ( | |
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| A genetic variant increasing melatonin signaling lowers cAMP levels, inhibiting insulin secretion. | T2D | ( | |
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| Loss of function mutations disrupt INS protein synthesis, folding, transport or bioactivity. | ND, MODY, T2D | ( |
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| Different coding genetic variants increase risk or protect against T2D. | T2D | ( | |
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| Non-coding genetic variant reduces ADCY5 expression, which couples glucose to cAMP generation, increasing T2D risk. | T2D | ( | |
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| Loss of function mutations lead to elevated ER stress and beta cell dysfunction. | ND, T2D | ( |
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| Loss of function mutations induce beta cell ER stress and hypersensitivity to glucotoxicity and lipotoxicity. | T2D | ( | |
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| Coding genetic variants associated with increased T2D risk. | T2D | ( | |
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| Loss of function mutations cause childhood diabetes and a neurodevelopmental disorder. | ND, T2D | ( | |
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| Loss of function mutations impaired ER-to-Golgi trafficking leading to increased beta cell ER-stress. | ND | ( | |
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| Loss of function mutations impair transcriptional regulation of pancreatic development and adult islet cell function. | ND, MODY, T2D | ( |
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| Loss of function mutations impair transcriptional regulation of pancreatic development and adult islet cell function. | ND, MODY | ( | |
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| Loss of function mutations impair transcriptional regulation of pancreatic development and adult islet cell function. | ND, MODY | ( | |
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| Coding and non-coding genetic variants impair transcriptional pancreatic development and adult islet cell function | ND, MODY, T2D | ( | |
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| Coding and non-coding genetic variants impair transcriptional pancreatic development and adult islet cell function. | MODY, T2D, CHI | ( | |
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| Coding and non-coding genetic variants impair transcriptional pancreatic development and adult islet cell function. | ND, MODY, T2D | ( | |
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| Coding and non-coding genetic variants impair transcriptional pancreatic development and adult islet cell function. | MODY, T2D, CHI | ( | |
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| Coding and non-coding genetic variants impair transcriptional pancreatic development and adult islet cell function. | T2D | ( |
ND, Neonatal Diabetes; MODY, Maturity Onset Diabetes of the Young; T2D, Type 2 Diabetes; CHI, Congenital Hyperinsulinism.
Summary of genetic variants that impact on molecular mechanisms involved in insulin secretion by the beta cell, classified by the mechanism affected and detailing the impact of the genetic defect.
Figure 1Insulin secretion molecular mechanisms affected in diabetes. Genetic defects can impair different processes involved in regulated insulin secretion (known genes affected in red text): glucose import and metabolism (G6P, glucose 6-phosphate; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; TCA, tricarboxylic acid cycle; abnormal beta cell metabolism of non-glucose carbon sources due to failure in silencing of disallowed genes depicted in gray text), membrane depolarization, membrane receptors, insulin synthesis and secretion, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) homeostasis, and transcriptional regulation.
Figure 2Multistage differentiation protocol to generate functional islet cells from human pluripotent stem cells. Current islet cell differentiation protocols mimic pancreatic developmental stages. Here we represent the commonly used stages [based on (121)], with their usual duration in days, together with cell markers used for the characterization of the differentiated cells (black text) and the cocktails of signaling molecules utilized to induce differentiation (gray text; FGF7, fibroblast growth factor 7; VitC, vitamin C, ascorbic acid; RA, retinoic acid; SANT, SANT-1, a sonic hedgehog signaling inhibitor; LDN, LDN-193189, a BMP inhibitor; EGF, epidermal growth factor; Nic, nicotinamide; ALK5i, a TGF-beta inhibitor; GSiXX, gamma secretase inhibitor used to inhibit Notch signaling; BTC, betacellulin; T3, triiodothyronine; NAC, N-Acetylcysteine).
Key characteristics of human islets.
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List of various features of primary isolated human islets that can be taken into consideration for comparison to stem cell derived islet cells.
Figure 3Schematic showing the potential application of stem cell-derived insulin-producing cells for the treatment of diabetes.