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Glucose Response by Stem Cell-Derived β Cells In Vitro Is Inhibited by a Bottleneck in Glycolysis.

Citation
Davis, J. C., et al. “Glucose Response By Stem Cell-Derived Β Cells In Vitro Is Inhibited By A Bottleneck In Glycolysis.”. Cell Reports, p. 107623.
Center Yale University
Author Jeffrey C Davis, Tiago C Alves, Aharon Helman, Jonathan C Chen, Jennifer H Kenty, Rebecca L Cardone, David R Liu, Richard G Kibbey, Douglas A Melton
Keywords GSIS, MIMOSA, differentiation, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, Metabolic profiling, stem cell metabolism, stem cell-derived β cell, β-cell metabolism
Abstract

Stem cell-derived β (SC-β) cells could provide unlimited human β cells toward a curative diabetes treatment. Differentiation of SC-β cells yields transplantable islets that secrete insulin in response to glucose challenges. Following transplantation into mice, SC-β cell function is comparable to human islets, but the magnitude and consistency of response in vitro are less robust than observed in cadaveric islets. Here, we profile metabolism of SC-β cells and islets to quantify their capacity to sense glucose and identify reduced anaplerotic cycling in the mitochondria as the cause of reduced glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in SC-β cells. This activity can be rescued by challenging SC-β cells with intermediate metabolites from the TCA cycle and late but not early glycolysis, downstream of the enzymes glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphoglycerate kinase. Bypassing this metabolic bottleneck results in a robust, bi-phasic insulin release in vitro that is identical in magnitude to functionally mature human islets.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Cell reports
Volume
31
Issue
6
Number of Pages
107623
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
2211-1247
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2020.107623
Alternate Journal
Cell Rep
PMID
32402282
PMCID
PMC7433758
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