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Mitigating Ischemic Injury of Stem Cell-Derived Insulin-Producing Cells after Transplant.

Citation
Faleo, G., et al. “Mitigating Ischemic Injury Of Stem Cell-Derived Insulin-Producing Cells After Transplant.”. Stem Cell Reports, pp. 807-819.
Author Gaetano Faleo, Holger A Russ, Steven Wisel, Audrey Parent V, Vinh Nguyen, Gopika G Nair, Jonathan E Freise, Karina E Villanueva, Gregory L Szot, Matthias Hebrok, Qizhi Tang
Keywords graft survival, hypoxia, ischemia, islet transplant, nutrient deprivation, stem cell-derived insulin-producing cells, type 1 diabetes
Abstract

The advent of large-scale in vitro differentiation of human stem cell-derived insulin-producing cells (SCIPC) has brought us closer to treating diabetes using stem cell technology. However, decades of experiences from islet transplantation show that ischemia-induced islet cell death after transplant severely limits the efficacy of the therapy. It is unclear to what extent human SCIPC are susceptible to ischemia. In this study, we show that more than half of SCIPC die shortly after transplantation. Nutrient deprivation and hypoxia acted synergistically to kill SCIPC in vitro. Amino acid supplementation rescued SCIPC from nutrient deprivation, likely by providing cellular energy. Generating SCIPC under physiological oxygen tension of 5% conferred hypoxia resistance without affecting their differentiation or function. A two-pronged strategy of physiological oxygen acclimatization during differentiation and amino acid supplementation during transplantation significantly improved SCIPC survival after transplant.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Stem cell reports
Volume
9
Issue
3
Number of Pages
807-819
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
2213-6711
DOI
10.1016/j.stemcr.2017.07.012
Alternate Journal
Stem Cell Reports
PMID
28803916
PMCID
PMC5599226
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