A human islet cell culture system for high-throughput screening

D Walpita, T Hasaka, J Spoonamore… - Journal of …, 2012 - journals.sagepub.com
D Walpita, T Hasaka, J Spoonamore, A Vetere, KK Takane, D Fomina-Yadlin
Journal of biomolecular screening, 2012journals.sagepub.com
A small-molecule inducer of beta-cell proliferation in human islets represents a potential
regeneration strategy for treating type 1 diabetes. However, the lack of suitable human beta
cell lines makes such a discovery a challenge. Here, we adapted an islet cell culture system
to high-throughput screening to identify such small molecules. We prepared microtiter plates
containing extracellular matrix from a human bladder carcinoma cell line. Dissociated
human islets were seeded onto these plates, cultured for up to 7 days, and assessed for …
A small-molecule inducer of beta-cell proliferation in human islets represents a potential regeneration strategy for treating type 1 diabetes. However, the lack of suitable human beta cell lines makes such a discovery a challenge. Here, we adapted an islet cell culture system to high-throughput screening to identify such small molecules. We prepared microtiter plates containing extracellular matrix from a human bladder carcinoma cell line. Dissociated human islets were seeded onto these plates, cultured for up to 7 days, and assessed for proliferation by simultaneous Ki67 and C-peptide immunofluorescence. Importantly, this environment preserved beta-cell physiological function, as measured by glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Adenoviral overexpression of cdk-6 and cyclin D1, known inducers of human beta cell proliferation, was used as a positive control in our assay. This induction was inhibited by cotreatment with rapamycin, an immunosuppressant often used in islet transplantation. We then performed a pilot screen of 1280 compounds, observing some phenotypic effects on cells. This high-throughput human islet cell culture method can be used to assess various aspects of beta-cell biology on a relatively large number of compounds.
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