Differentiation of human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cell into insulin-producing cells: an in vitro study.
J Physiol Biochem · 2013
Last updated 2026-05-28In a lab study, researchers took stem cells from human fat tissue and successfully turned them into insulin-producing cells using a three-step process with specific chemicals and conditions. The new cells formed clusters similar to pancreatic islets, tested positive for insulin, and showed genetic markers linked to insulin production, confirming they could make insulin.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Physiol Biochem, 2013 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 48 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.60 |
| NIH percentile | 67 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
Stem cells with the ability to differentiate into insulin-producing cells (IPCs) are becoming the most promising therapy for diabetes mellitus and reduce the major limitations of availability and allogeneic rejection of beta cell transplantations. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are pluripotent stromal cells with the ability to proliferate and differentiate into a variety of cell types including endocrine cells of the pancreas. This study sought to inspect the in vitro differentiation of human adipose-derived tissue stem cells into IPCs which could provide an abundant source of cells for the purpose of diabetic cell therapy in addition to avoid immunological rejection. Adipose-derived MSCs were obtained from liposuction aspirates and induced to differentiate into insulin-secreting cells under a three-stage protocol based on a combination of low-glucose DMEM medium, β-mercaptoethanol, and nicotinamide for pre-induction and high-glucose DMEM, β-mercaptoethanol, nicotinamide, and exendin-4 for induction stages of differentiation. Differentiation was evaluated by the analysis of morphology, dithizone staining, RT-PCR, and immunocytochemistry. Morphological changes including typical islet-like cell clusters were observed by phase-contrast microscope at the end of differentiation protocol. Based on dithizone staining, differentiated cells were positive and undifferentiated cells were not stained. Furthermore, RT-PCR results confirmed the expression of insulin, PDX1, Ngn3, PAX4, and GLUT2 in differentiated cells. Moreover, insulin production by the IPCs was confirmed by immunocytochemistry analysis. It is concluded that adipose-derived MSCs could differentiate into insulin-producing cells in vitro.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23271274 ↗