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  • Recapitulating endocrine cell clustering in culture promotes maturation of human stem-cell-derived β cells.

Recapitulating endocrine cell clustering in culture promotes maturation of human stem-cell-derived β cells.

Nature cell biology (2019-02-03)
Gopika G Nair, Jennifer S Liu, Holger A Russ, Stella Tran, Michael S Saxton, Richard Chen, Charity Juang, Mei-Lan Li, Vinh Q Nguyen, Simone Giacometti, Sapna Puri, Yuan Xing, Yong Wang, Gregory L Szot, Jose Oberholzer, Anil Bhushan, Matthias Hebrok
ABSTRACT

Despite advances in the differentiation of insulin-producing cells from human embryonic stem cells, the generation of mature functional β cells in vitro has remained elusive. To accomplish this goal, we have developed cell culture conditions to closely mimic events occurring during pancreatic islet organogenesis and β cell maturation. In particular, we have focused on recapitulating endocrine cell clustering by isolating and reaggregating immature β-like cells to form islet-sized enriched β-clusters (eBCs). eBCs display physiological properties analogous to primary human β cells, including robust dynamic insulin secretion, increased calcium signalling in response to secretagogues, and improved mitochondrial energization. Notably, endocrine cell clustering induces metabolic maturation by driving mitochondrial oxidative respiration, a process central to stimulus-secretion coupling in mature β cells. eBCs display glucose-stimulated insulin secretion as early as three days after transplantation in mice. In summary, replicating aspects of endocrine cell clustering permits the generation of stem-cell-derived β cells that resemble their endogenous counterparts.