Transplant International (Jan 2024)

Glucose Concentration in Regulating Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Differentiation Toward Insulin-Producing Cells

  • Chencheng Wang,
  • Chencheng Wang,
  • Shadab Abadpour,
  • Shadab Abadpour,
  • Petter Angell Olsen,
  • Petter Angell Olsen,
  • Daxin Wang,
  • Justyna Stokowiec,
  • Simona Chera,
  • Luiza Ghila,
  • Helge Ræder,
  • Helge Ræder,
  • Stefan Krauss,
  • Stefan Krauss,
  • Aleksandra Aizenshtadt,
  • Hanne Scholz,
  • Hanne Scholz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/ti.2024.11900
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37

Abstract

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The generation of insulin-producing cells from human-induced pluripotent stem cells holds great potential for diabetes modeling and treatment. However, existing protocols typically involve incubating cells with un-physiologically high concentrations of glucose, which often fail to generate fully functional IPCs. Here, we investigated the influence of high (20 mM) versus low (5.5 mM) glucose concentrations on IPCs differentiation in three hiPSC lines. In two hiPSC lines that were unable to differentiate to IPCs sufficiently, we found that high glucose during differentiation leads to a shortage of NKX6.1+ cells that have co-expression with PDX1 due to insufficient NKX6.1 gene activation, thus further reducing differentiation efficiency. Furthermore, high glucose during differentiation weakened mitochondrial respiration ability. In the third iPSC line, which is IPC differentiation amenable, glucose concentrations did not affect the PDX1/NKX6.1 expression and differentiation efficiency. In addition, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion was only seen in the differentiation under a high glucose condition. These IPCs have higher KATP channel activity and were linked to sufficient ABCC8 gene expression under a high glucose condition. These data suggest high glucose concentration during IPC differentiation is necessary to generate functional IPCs. However, in cell lines that were IPC differentiation unamenable, high glucose could worsen the situation.

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