4.6 Article

Spheroid Fabrication Using Concave Microwells Enhances the Differentiation Efficacy and Function of Insulin-Producing Cells via Cytoskeletal Changes

Journal

CELLS
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells9122551

Keywords

insulin-producing cells; spheroid; three-dimensional culture; concave microwell; diabetes; cytoskeleton changes

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Science and Technology [NRF-2017M3A9C6032060]
  2. Asan Institute for Life Sciences, Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Korea [2018IE7001]
  3. [Dia-Cure P_37_794]
  4. [POC-A. 1-A.1.1.4-E-2015]

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Pancreatic islet transplantation is the fundamental treatment for insulin-dependent diabetes; however, donor shortage is a major hurdle in its use as a standard treatment. Accordingly, differentiated insulin-producing cells (DIPCs) are being developed as a new islet source. Differentiation efficiency could be enhanced if the spheroid structure of the natural islets could be recapitulated. Here, we fabricated DIPC spheroids using concave microwells, which enabled large-scale production of spheroids of the desired size. We prepared DIPCs from human liver cells by trans-differentiation using transcription factor gene transduction. Islet-related gene expression and insulin secretion levels were higher in spheroids compared to those in single-cell DIPCs, whereas actin-myosin interactions significantly decreased. We verified actin-myosin-dependent insulin expression in single-cell DIPCs by using actin-myosin interaction inhibitors. Upon transplanting cells into the kidney capsule of diabetic mouse, blood glucose levels decreased to 200 mg/dL in spheroid-transplanted mice but not in single cell-transplanted mice. Spheroid-transplanted mice showed high engraftment efficiency in in vivo fluorescence imaging. These results demonstrated that spheroids fabricated using concave microwells enhanced the engraftment and functions of DIPCs via actin-myosin-mediated cytoskeletal changes. Our strategy potentially extends the clinical application of DIPCs for improved differentiation, glycemic control, and transplantation efficiency of islets.

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