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PDGF Facilitates Direct Lineage Reprogramming of Hepatocytes to Functional β-Like Cells Induced by Pdx1 and Ngn3.

Cell Transplant · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers found that liver cells from mice and humans can be converted into insulin-producing cells similar to pancreatic beta cells by using two proteins, Pdx1 and Ngn3. Adding another protein, PDGF-AA, improved this process, making the new cells better at releasing insulin when blood sugar levels rise. When these reprogrammed cells were transplanted into diabetic mice, they helped lower high blood sugar.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalCell Transplant, 2016
Citations12
Relative citation ratio0.37
NIH percentile22
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Islet transplantation has been proven to be an effective treatment for patients with type 1 diabetes, but a lack of islet donors limits the use of transplantation therapies. It has been previously demonstrated that hepatocytes can be converted into insulin-producing β-like cells by introducing pancreatic transcription factors, indicating that direct hepatocyte reprogramming holds potential as a treatment for diabetes. However, the efficiency at which functional β-cells can be derived from hepatocyte reprogramming remains low. Here we demonstrated that the combination of Pdx1 and Ngn3 can trigger reprogramming of mouse and human liver cells to insulin-producing cells that exhibit the characteristics of pancreatic β-cells. Treatment with PDGF-AA was found to facilitate Pdx1 and Ngn3-induced reprogramming of hepatocytes to β-like cells with the ability to secrete insulin in response to glucose stimulus. Importantly, this reprogramming strategy could be applied to adult mouse primary hepatocytes, and the transplantation of β-like cells derived from primary hepatocyte reprogramming could ameliorate hyperglycemia in diabetic mice. These findings support the possibility of developing transplantation therapies for type 1 diabetes through the use of β-like cells derived from autologous hepatocyte reprogramming.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27076404 ↗