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Generation of insulin-producing hepatocyte-like cells from human Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stem cells as an alternative source of islet cells.

Islet cell transplantation, as a treatment of type 1 diabetes, has a lot of complexity such as allograft rejections and an insufficient number of donors. The liver can be used as a replacement for endogenous insulin production. Hepatocytes can inherently respond to glucose levels and secrete proteins. Utilization of mesenchymal stem cells for curing diabetes represents a major focus of recent investigations. As a new choice for transplantation, we have proposed glucose-regulated insulin-producing hepatocyte-like cells, which produce insulin dependent on glucose levels. We have transfected human Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stem cells with the special construct, which included homology arms and glucose-responsive elements upstream of the minimum liver-type pyruvate kinase promoter-directed insulin gene. Then, we have differentiated these transfected cells to hepatocyte-like cells by using serial exposure of different inducing material and exogenous growth factors. Immunofluorescence analyses have demonstrated the expression of albumin, cytokeratin-18, Hep-Par1, α-fetoprotein, and insulin. The expression of hepatocyte marker genes in the differentiated cells was confirmed by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Interestingly, flow cytometry results showed that approximately 60% of the insulin-producing hepatocyte-like cells were simultaneously cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4) and insulin positive. CYP3A4 is a significant enzyme found in mature liver tissue. This confirmed that the differentiation and the transfection procedures were done correctly. They were functionally active by releasing insulin in response to elevated glucose concentrations in vitro. These applicable cells could be used in the liver for cell therapy of diabetes.

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