Abstract

The generation of a human pancreatic beta cell line which reproduces the responses seen in primary beta cells, but is amenable to propagation in culture, has long been an important goal in diabetes research. This is particularly true for studies focussing on the role of enteroviral infection as a potential cause of beta-cell autoimmunity in type 1 diabetes. In the present work we made use of a clonal beta cell line (1.1B4) available from the European Collection of Authenticated Cell Cultures, which had been generated by the fusion of primary human beta-cells with a pancreatic ductal carcinoma cell, PANC-1. Our goal was to study the factors allowing the development and persistence of a chronic enteroviral infection in human beta-cells. Since PANC-1 cells have been reported to support persistent enteroviral infection, the hybrid 1.1B4 cells appeared to offer an ideal vehicle for our studies. In support of this, infection of the cells with a Coxsackie virus isolated originally from the pancreas of a child with type 1 diabetes, CVB4.E2, at a low multiplicity of infection, resulted in the development of a state of persistent infection. Investigation of the molecular mechanisms suggested that this response was facilitated by a number of unexpected outcomes including an apparent failure of the cells to up-regulate certain anti-viral response gene products in response to interferons. However, more detailed exploration revealed that this lack of response was restricted to molecular targets that were either activated by, or detected with, human-selective reagents. By contrast, and to our surprise, the cells were much more responsive to rodent-selective reagents. Using multiple approaches, we then established that populations of 1.1B4 cells are not homogeneous but that they contain a mixture of rodent and human cells. This was true both of our own cell stocks and those held by the European Collection of Authenticated Cell Cultures. In view of this unexpected finding, we developed a strategy to harvest, isolate and expand single cell clones from the heterogeneous population, which allowed us to establish colonies of 1.1B4 cells that were uniquely human (h1.1.B4). However, extensive analysis of the gene expression profiles, immunoreactive insulin content, regulated secretory pathways and the electrophysiological properties of these cells demonstrated that they did not retain the principal characteristics expected of human beta cells. Our data suggest that stocks of 1.1B4 cells should be evaluated carefully prior to their use as a model human beta-cell since they may not retain the phenotype expected of human beta-cells.

Highlights

  • The generation of a human pancreatic beta cell line which reproduces the responses seen in primary beta cells, but is amenable to propagation in culture, has long been an important goal in diabetes research

  • These findings were confirmed by multiple methods and in a number of cellular stocks, including those held by the European Collection of Authenticated Cell Cultures (ECACC)

  • As a means to study the ability of 1.1B4 cells to sustain and propagate a productive enteroviral infection, the cells were exposed to a strain of Coxsackie B4 (CVB4.E2) at an MOI of 0.01 and the progress of the infection followed over time

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Summary

Introduction

The generation of a human pancreatic beta cell line which reproduces the responses seen in primary beta cells, but is amenable to propagation in culture, has long been an important goal in diabetes research. This work has prompted a further and much less anticipated conclusion by indicating that the enteroviral infections present in beta-cells may develop in an atypical, persistent, ­form[15,16,17,18,19,20] Verification of this hypothesis would offer new insights into the role of environmental factors in the development of type 1 diabetes but it has been difficult to evaluate fully using human tissue samples because they present the disease process at only a single point in time. It became clear that simple propagation of the cells over successive passages can lead to a diminution in the sub-population of the human cells, leading to an expansion of the proportion of their rodent counterparts These findings were confirmed by multiple methods and in a number of cellular stocks, including those held by the European Collection of Authenticated Cell Cultures (ECACC)

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