An Abbreviated Protocol for In Vitro Generation of Functional Human Embryonic Stem Cell-Derived Beta-Like Cells.
PLoS One · 2016
Last updated 2026-05-28Researchers developed a 25–30 day process to turn human embryonic stem cells into insulin-producing beta-like cells in a lab. The final cells included 35% insulin-only cells and 30% cells that were insulin-positive and also produced a protein called NKX6.1. These lab-made cells released insulin when exposed to high glucose and responded to repeated glucose changes, showing they could mimic natural beta-cell function. The team suggests these cells could be used to test potential diabetes treatments in the lab.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | PLoS One, 2016 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 23 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.85 |
| NIH percentile | 45 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
The ability to yield glucose-responsive pancreatic beta-cells from human pluripotent stem cells in vitro will facilitate the development of the cell replacement therapies for the treatment of Type 1 Diabetes. Here, through the sequential in vitro targeting of selected signaling pathways, we have developed an abbreviated five-stage protocol (25-30 days) to generate human Embryonic Stem Cell-Derived Beta-like Cells (ES-DBCs). We showed that Geltrex, as an extracellular matrix, could support the generation of ES-DBCs more efficiently than that of the previously described culture systems. The activation of FGF and Retinoic Acid along with the inhibition of BMP, SHH and TGF-beta led to the generation of 75% NKX6.1+/NGN3+ Endocrine Progenitors. The inhibition of Notch and tyrosine kinase receptor AXL, and the treatment with Exendin-4 and T3 in the final stage resulted in 35% mono-hormonal insulin positive cells, 1% insulin and glucagon positive cells and 30% insulin and NKX6.1 co-expressing cells. Functionally, ES-DBCs were responsive to high glucose in static incubation and perifusion studies, and could secrete insulin in response to successive glucose stimulations. Mitochondrial metabolic flux analyses using Seahorse demonstrated that the ES-DBCs could efficiently metabolize glucose and generate intracellular signals to trigger insulin secretion. In conclusion, targeting selected signaling pathways for 25-30 days was sufficient to generate ES-DBCs in vitro. The ability of ES-DBCs to secrete insulin in response to glucose renders them a promising model for the in vitro screening of drugs, small molecules or genes that may have potential to influence beta-cell function.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27755557 ↗