Abstract

The regenerative medicine field is expanding with great successes in laboratory and preclinical settings. Pancreatic acinar cells in diabetic mice were recently converted into β-cells by treatment with ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF). This suggests that human acinar cells might become a cornerstone for diabetes cell therapy in the future, if they can also be converted into glucose-responsive insulin-producing cells. Presently, studying pancreatic acinar cell biology in vitro is limited by their high plasticity, as they rapidly lose their phenotype and spontaneously transdifferentiate to a duct-like phenotype in culture. We questioned whether human pancreatic acinar cell phenotype could be preserved in vitro by physico-chemical manipulations and whether this could be valuable in the study of β-cell neogenesis. We found that culture at low temperature (4°C) resulted in the maintenance of morphological and molecular acinar cell characteristics. Specifically, chilled acinar cells did not form the spherical clusters observed in controls (culture at 37°C), and they maintained high levels of acinar-specific transcripts and proteins. Five-day chilled acinar cells still transdifferentiated into duct-like cells upon transfer to 37°C. Moreover, adenoviral-mediated gene transfer evidenced an active Amylase promoter in the 7-day chilled acinar cells, and transduction performed in chilled conditions improved acinar cell labelling. Together, our findings indicate the maintenance of human pancreatic acinar cell phenotype at low temperature and the possibility to efficiently label acinar cells, which opens new perspectives for the study of human acinar-to-β-cell transdifferentiation.

Highlights

  • Type 1 diabetes mellitus is a leading metabolic disease that might benefit from the ongoing cell therapy developments

  • Human exocrine pancreas cells maintain their morphology and protein content in low temperature cultures Acinar cell preparations were cultured in the incubator (37◦C, control) or in the refrigerator (4–8◦C, chilled) for a few days and examined daily under the light microscope

  • We assessed the immunofluorescence detection of the acinar enzymes Amylase and Chymotrypsin in these cultures. Both proteins were present in the majority of freshly isolated exocrine cells (Supplementary Figures S1A and S1B), and after chilled culture for 5 days

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Type 1 diabetes mellitus is a leading metabolic disease that might benefit from the ongoing cell therapy developments. Previous studies recommended lentiviral vectors for labelling rat pancreatic acinar cells in vitro [17], but the need for genome integration before reporter expression precludes its use for optimally tracing acinar cells since specific marker genes are rapidly silenced in culture. We assume that this limitation could be overcome by methods that can stabilize acinar cell phenotype in vitro. We used adenoviral reporters to demonstrate improved labelling of chilled human acinar cells, delineating a culture system that may uncover human acinar-to-β-cell transdifferentiation in the future

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