TY - JOUR
T1 - Differentiation of human umbilical cord blood-derived mononuclear cells to endocrine pancreatic lineage
AU - Parekh, Vishal S.
AU - Joglekar, Mugdha V.
AU - Hardikar, Anandwardhan A.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Generation of insulin-producing cells remains a major limitation for cellular replacement therapy in treatment of diabetes. To understand the potential of human umbilical cord blood (hUCB)-derived mononuclear cells (MNCs) in cell replacement therapy for diabetes, we studied MNCs isolated from 270 human umbilical cord blood samples. We characterized these by immunostaining and real-time PCR and studied their ability to differentiate into insulin-producing cells. We observe that freshly isolated MNCs as well as mesenchymal-like cells grown out by in vitro culture of isolated MNCs express key pancreatic transcription factors: pdx1, ngn3, isl1, brn4 and pax6. However, after 32-fold expansion, MNCs show decreased abundance of pdx1 and ngn3, indicating that islet/pancreatic progenitors detected in freshly isolated MNCs die or are diluted out during in vitro expansion. We therefore transplanted freshly isolated MNCs in NOD/SCID (immuno-incompetent) or FVB/NJ (immuno-competent) mice to check their ability to differentiate into insulin-producing cells. We observe that after 9 weeks of transplantation, ~25% grafts exhibit human insulin-producing (16% immunopositive) cells. The number and abundance of pro-insulin transcript-containing cells increased when the animals underwent partial pancreatectomy, 15 days after transplantation. Our results indicate that such hUCB-derived MNC population contains a subset of "pancreas-committed" cells that have the potential to differentiate into insulin-producing cells in vivo. Further studies in understanding the differentiation potential of this subset of pancreas-committed hUCB-derived MNCs will provide us with an autologous source of "lineage-committed" progenitors for cell replacement therapy in diabetes.
AB - Generation of insulin-producing cells remains a major limitation for cellular replacement therapy in treatment of diabetes. To understand the potential of human umbilical cord blood (hUCB)-derived mononuclear cells (MNCs) in cell replacement therapy for diabetes, we studied MNCs isolated from 270 human umbilical cord blood samples. We characterized these by immunostaining and real-time PCR and studied their ability to differentiate into insulin-producing cells. We observe that freshly isolated MNCs as well as mesenchymal-like cells grown out by in vitro culture of isolated MNCs express key pancreatic transcription factors: pdx1, ngn3, isl1, brn4 and pax6. However, after 32-fold expansion, MNCs show decreased abundance of pdx1 and ngn3, indicating that islet/pancreatic progenitors detected in freshly isolated MNCs die or are diluted out during in vitro expansion. We therefore transplanted freshly isolated MNCs in NOD/SCID (immuno-incompetent) or FVB/NJ (immuno-competent) mice to check their ability to differentiate into insulin-producing cells. We observe that after 9 weeks of transplantation, ~25% grafts exhibit human insulin-producing (16% immunopositive) cells. The number and abundance of pro-insulin transcript-containing cells increased when the animals underwent partial pancreatectomy, 15 days after transplantation. Our results indicate that such hUCB-derived MNC population contains a subset of "pancreas-committed" cells that have the potential to differentiate into insulin-producing cells in vivo. Further studies in understanding the differentiation potential of this subset of pancreas-committed hUCB-derived MNCs will provide us with an autologous source of "lineage-committed" progenitors for cell replacement therapy in diabetes.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:76286
U2 - 10.1016/j.diff.2009.07.004
DO - 10.1016/j.diff.2009.07.004
M3 - Article
SN - 0301-4681
VL - 78
SP - 232
EP - 240
JO - Differentiation
JF - Differentiation
IS - 4
ER -