Diabetes relief in mice by glucose-sensing insulin-secreting human α-cells

通过葡萄糖感应胰岛素分泌的人类 α 细胞缓解小鼠的糖尿病

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作者:Kenichiro Furuyama, Simona Chera, Léon van Gurp, Daniel Oropeza, Luiza Ghila, Nicolas Damond, Heidrun Vethe, Joao A Paulo, Antoinette M Joosten, Thierry Berney, Domenico Bosco, Craig Dorrell, Markus Grompe, Helge Ræder, Bart O Roep, Fabrizio Thorel, Pedro L Herrera

Abstract

Cell-identity switches, in which terminally differentiated cells are converted into different cell types when stressed, represent a widespread regenerative strategy in animals, yet they are poorly documented in mammals. In mice, some glucagon-producing pancreatic α-cells and somatostatin-producing δ-cells become insulin-expressing cells after the ablation of insulin-secreting β-cells, thus promoting diabetes recovery. Whether human islets also display this plasticity, especially in diabetic conditions, remains unknown. Here we show that islet non-β-cells, namely α-cells and pancreatic polypeptide (PPY)-producing γ-cells, obtained from deceased non-diabetic or diabetic human donors, can be lineage-traced and reprogrammed by the transcription factors PDX1 and MAFA to produce and secrete insulin in response to glucose. When transplanted into diabetic mice, converted human α-cells reverse diabetes and continue to produce insulin even after six months. Notably, insulin-producing α-cells maintain expression of α-cell markers, as seen by deep transcriptomic and proteomic characterization. These observations provide conceptual evidence and a molecular framework for a mechanistic understanding of in situ cell plasticity as a treatment for diabetes and other degenerative diseases.

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