Treatment of diabetes by transplantation of drug-inducible insulin-producing gut cells.

J Mol Med (Berl)

Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Medicine, Department of Cellular & Physiological Sciences, University of British Columbia, 2350 Health Sciences Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z3, Canada.

Published: July 2009

Most patients with type 1 diabetes rely on multiple daily insulin injections to maintain blood glucose control. However, insulin injections carry the risk of inducing hypoglycemia and do not eliminate diabetic complications. We sought to develop and evaluate a regulatable cell-based system for delivery of insulin to treat diabetes. We generated two intestinal cell lines in which human insulin expression is controlled by mifepristone. Insulin mRNA expression was dependent on the mifepristone dose and incubation time and cells displayed insulin and C-peptide immunoreactivity and glucose-induced insulin release following mifepristone treatment. Cell transplantation followed by mifepristone administration reversed streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes in mice, and this effect was dependent on the mifepristone dose delivered. These data support the notion that engineering regulatable insulin expression within a cell already equipped for regulated secretion may be efficacious for the treatment of insulin-dependent diabetes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00109-009-0465-0DOI Listing

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