Research Alert

A century has passed since the Nobel Prize winning discovery of insulin, which still remains the mainstay treatment for type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) to this day. True to the words of its discoverer Sir Frederick Banting, “insulin is not a cure for diabetes, it is a treatment”, millions of people with T1DM are dependent on daily insulin medications for life. Clinical donor islet transplantation has proven that T1DM is curable, however due to profound shortages of donor islets, it is not a mainstream treatment option for T1DM. Human pluripotent stem cell derived insulin-secreting cells, pervasively known as stem cell-derived β cells (SC-β cells), are a promising alternative source and have the potential to become a T1DM treatment through cell replacement therapy. Here we briefly review how islet β cells develop and mature in vivo and several types of reported SC-β cells produced using different ex vivo protocols in the last decade. Although some markers of maturation were expressed and glucose stimulated insulin secretion was shown, the SC-β cells have not been directly compared to their in vivo counterparts, generally have limited glucose response, and are not yet fully matured. Due to the presence of extra-pancreatic insulin-expressing cells, and ethical and technological issues, further clarification of the true nature of these SC-β cells is required.

Key Words: Human pluripotent stem cells, Stem cell-derived β cells, Islet β cells, Type 1 diabetes mellitus, Cell replacement therapy

Core Tip: Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a metabolic condition of absolute or relative deficiency in insulin. Since the discovery of insulin 100 years ago, there has been slow progress in the treatment of type 1 DM (T1DM) in clinical practice. In the scientific community however, there is much interest and progression in the research of human pluripotent stem cell derived insulin producing β-like cells, pervasively known as stem cell-derived β cells (SC-β cells). If they are determined to be genuine, scalable and functionally matured, SC-β cells have the potential to cure T1DM through cell replacement therapy.



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