Abstract

Diabetes can be managed by careful monitoring of blood glucose and timely delivery of exogenous insulin. However, even with fastidious compliance, people with diabetes can suffer from numerous complications including atherosclerosis, retinopathy, neuropathy, and kidney disease. This is because delivery of exogenous insulin coupled with glucose monitoring cannot provide the fine level of glucose control normally provided by endogenous β-cells in the context of intact islets. Moreover, a subset of people with diabetes lack awareness of hypoglycemic events; a status that can have grave consequences. Therefore, much effort has been focused on replacing lost or dysfunctional β-cells with cells derived from other sources. The advent of stem cell biology and cellular reprogramming strategies have provided impetus to this work and raised hopes that a β-cell replacement therapy is on the horizon. In this review, we look at two components that will be required for successful β-cell replacement therapy: a reliable and safe source of β-cells and a mechanism by which such cells can be delivered and protected from host immune destruction. Particular attention is paid to insulin-producing cells derived from pluripotent stem cells because this platform addresses the issue of scale, one of the more significant hurdles associated with potential cell-based therapies. We also review methods for encapsulating transplanted cells, a technique that allows grafts to evade immune attack and survive for a long term in the absence of ongoing immunosuppression. In surveying the literature, we conclude that there are still several substantial hurdles that need to be cleared before a stem cell-based β-cell replacement therapy for diabetes becomes a reality.

Highlights

  • Diabetes mellitus encompasses a group of metabolic disorders that affect the ability to regulate blood glucose levels and can be classified into two main groups, type 1 and type 2

  • Known as juvenile-onset diabetes, Type 1 diabetes is thought to result from T-cell-mediated autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing b-cells and is believed to have a genetic component (reviewed in Concannon et al (2009)), recently, both these contentions have been challenged (Skog et al 2013)

  • With the advent of insulin, diabetes was transformed into a chronic condition managed by careful monitoring of diet and blood glucose levels, in conjunction with insulin replacement therapy via s.c. injections or through an insulin pump (Tamborlane et al 1979, Weissberg-Benchell et al 2003, Renard et al 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes mellitus encompasses a group of metabolic disorders that affect the ability to regulate blood glucose levels and can be classified into two main groups, type 1 and type 2. Known as juvenile-onset diabetes, Type 1 diabetes is thought to result from T-cell-mediated autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing b-cells and is believed to have a genetic component (reviewed in Concannon et al (2009)), recently, both these contentions have been challenged (Skog et al 2013).

Printed in Great Britain
Human pluripotent stem cells
Published by Bioscientifica Ltd
Development of the pancreas
Endocrine precusor
Differentiation of pluripotent stem cells into pancreatic cells
Findings
Nutrient access impeded by fibrosis and immune complexes
Full Text
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