4.6 Article

Mitigating Ischemic Injury of Stem Cell-Derived Insulin-Producing Cells after Transplant

期刊

STEM CELL REPORTS
卷 9, 期 3, 页码 807-819

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.stemcr.2017.07.012

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资金

  1. Foundation for Diabetes Research
  2. American Diabetes Association [1-15-BS-179]
  3. Larry Hillblom Foundation Fellowship
  4. UCSF Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research
  5. JDRF [3-2012-266]
  6. Eli and Edy the Broad Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Fellowship
  7. T32 grant [T32AI125222]
  8. NIH [DK105831, DK108666]
  9. NIH/NIDDK Diabetes and Endocrinology Core Research grant [P30DK063720]

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The advent of large-scale in vitro differentiation of human stem cell-derived insulin-producing cells (SCIPC) has brought us closer to treating diabetes using stem cell technology. However, decades of experiences from islet transplantation show that ischemia-induced islet cell death after transplant severely limits the efficacy of the therapy. It is unclear to what extent human SCIPC are susceptible to ischemia. In this study, we show that more than half of SCIPC die shortly after transplantation. Nutrient deprivation and hypoxia acted synergistically to kill SCIPC in vitro. Amino acid supplementation rescued SCIPC from nutrient deprivation, likely by providing cellular energy. Generating SCIPC under physiological oxygen tension of 5% conferred hypoxia resistance without affecting their differentiation or function. A two-pronged strategy of physiological oxygen acclimatization during differentiation and amino acid supplementation during transplantation significantly improved SCIPC survival after transplant.

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