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In vitro generation of pancreatic β-cells for diabetes treatment. I. β-like cells derived from human pluripotent stem cells.

Diabetes mellitus is a chronic disease that affects hundreds of millions of people worldwide. Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is characterized by the lack of pancreatic β-cells that had been destroyed as a result of an autoimmune response. Therefore, in patients with T1D, the replacement therapy with functional β-cells derived from extrinsic sources could be a preferable option as compared to insulin treatment. Unfortunately, successful transplantation of whole pancreata or pancreatic islets into patients with diabetes is available only to a fraction of them due to the scarcity of donors. The rapid development of cell reprogramming methods made it possible to generate large numbers of human β-like cells derived from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) or human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). This review describes the basis of in vitro differentiaton protocols of β-like cells that mimic changes of the main signaling pathways during the key stages of human and murine pancreas development, which are described first. During the last 15 years it was found that there are no important differences between hESCs and hiPSCs in their differentiation capacities into β-like cells and the expression profiles of the key transcription factors. The in vitro produced β-like cells are immature as demonstrated by functional tests in rodents and single-cell transcriptomic and proteomic analyses. After the transplantation of the β cell progenitors into immunocompromised diabetic mice, a few weeks have to pass before the increased insulin levels in response to glucose load appear. There is a continuous progress in the development of open-type encapsulation devices which allow the vascularization of the transplanted cells and protect them against host's immune cells. The results of the first clinical trial of human partially differentiated endocrine progenitors of β cells transplanted into patients with T1D will be published in the year 2019. It is hoped that further improvements in the techniques of large-scale generation of the β-like cells derived from human pluripotent stem cells will bring us closer to their clinical application as a form of cause-directed therapy for people with diabetes.

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