Renewable Human Cell Model for Type 1 Diabetes Research: EndoC- β H5/HUVEC Coculture Spheroids.
James M PorterMichael YitayewMaryam TabrizianPublished in: Journal of diabetes research (2023)
In vitro drug screening for type 1 diabetes therapies has largely been conducted on human organ donor islets for proof of efficacy. While native islets are the ultimate target of these drugs (either in situ or for transplantation), significant benefit can be difficult to ascertain due to the highly heterogeneous nature of individual donors and the overall scarcity of human islets for research. We present an in vitro coculture model based on immortalized insulin-producing beta-cell lines with human endothelial cells in 3D spheroids that aims to recapitulate the islet morphology in an effort towards developing a standardized cell model for in vitro diabetes research. Human insulin-producing immortalized EndoC- β H5 cells are cocultured with human endothelial cells in varying ratios to evaluate 3D cell culture models for type 1 diabetes research. Insulin secretion, metabolic activity, live cell fluorescence staining, and gene expression assays were used to compare the viability and functionality of spheroids composed of 100% beta-cells, 1 : 1 beta-cell/endothelial, and 1 : 3 beta-cell/endothelial. Monoculture and β H5/HUVEC cocultures formed compact spheroids within 7 days, with average diameter ~140 μ m. This pilot study indicated that stimulated insulin release from 0 to 20 mM glucose increased from ~8-fold for monoculture and 1 : 1 coculture spheroids to over 20-fold for 1 : 3 EndoC- β H5/HUVEC spheroids. Metabolic activity was also ~12% higher in the 1 : 3 EndoC- β H5/HUVEC group compared to other groups. Stimulating monoculture beta-cell spheroids with 20 mM glucose +1 μ g/mL glycine-modified INGAP-P increased the insulin stimulation index ~2-fold compared to glucose alone. Considering their availability and consistent phenotype, EndoC- β H5-based spheroids present a useful 3D cell model for in vitro testing and drug screening applications.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- type diabetes
- glycemic control
- cell therapy
- single cell
- gene expression
- high glucose
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- induced apoptosis
- insulin resistance
- emergency department
- blood glucose
- blood pressure
- dna methylation
- pluripotent stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell proliferation
- adipose tissue
- oxidative stress
- signaling pathway
- cell cycle arrest
- optical coherence tomography
- flow cytometry