Cargando…

Significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “Neo-Islets”, 3-D organoids of Mesenchymal Stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for Type I Diabetes

Novel biotherapies for Type 1 Diabetes that provide a significantly expanded donor pool and that deliver all islet hormones without requiring anti-rejection drugs are urgently needed. Scoring systems have improved islet allotransplantation outcomes, but their use may potentially result in the waste...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gooch, Anna M., Chowdhury, Sabiha S., Zhang, Ping M., Hu, Zhuma M., Westenfelder, Christof
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10449143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37616230
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290460
_version_ 1785094883945480192
author Gooch, Anna M.
Chowdhury, Sabiha S.
Zhang, Ping M.
Hu, Zhuma M.
Westenfelder, Christof
author_facet Gooch, Anna M.
Chowdhury, Sabiha S.
Zhang, Ping M.
Hu, Zhuma M.
Westenfelder, Christof
author_sort Gooch, Anna M.
collection PubMed
description Novel biotherapies for Type 1 Diabetes that provide a significantly expanded donor pool and that deliver all islet hormones without requiring anti-rejection drugs are urgently needed. Scoring systems have improved islet allotransplantation outcomes, but their use may potentially result in the waste of valuable cells for novel therapies. To address these issues, we created “Neo-Islets” (NIs), islet-sized organoids, by co-culturing in ultralow adhesion flasks culture-expanded islet (ICs) and Mesenchymal Stromal Cells (MSCs) (x 24 hrs, 1:1 ratio). The MSCs exert powerful immune- and cyto-protective, anti-inflammatory, proangiogenic, and other beneficial actions in NIs. The robust in vitro expansion of all islet hormone-producing cells is coupled to their expected progressive de-differentiation mediated by serum-induced cell cycle entry and Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT). Re-differentiation in vivo of the ICs and resumption of their physiological functions occurs by reversal of EMT and serum withdrawal-induced exit from the cell cycle. Accordingly, we reported that allogeneic, i.p.-administered NIs engraft in the omentum, increase Treg numbers and reestablish permanent normoglycemia in autoimmune diabetic NOD mice without immunosuppression. Our FDA-guided pilot study (INAD 012–0776) in insulin-dependent pet dogs showed similar responses, and both human- and canine-NIs established normoglycemia in STZ-diabetic NOD/SCID mice even though the utilized islets would be scored as unsuitable for transplantation. The present study further demonstrates that islet gene expression profiles (α, β, γ, δ) in human “non-clinical grade” islets obtained from diverse, non-diabetic human and canine donors (n = 6 each) closely correlate with population doublings, and the in vivo re-differentiation of endocrine islet cells clearly corresponds with the reestablishment of euglycemia in diabetic mice. Conclusion: human-NIs created from diverse, “non-clinical grade” donors have the potential to greatly expand patient access to this curative therapy of T1DM, facilitated by the efficient in vitro expansion of ICs that can produce ~ 270 therapeutic NI doses per donor for 70 kg recipients.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10449143
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-104491432023-08-25 Significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “Neo-Islets”, 3-D organoids of Mesenchymal Stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for Type I Diabetes Gooch, Anna M. Chowdhury, Sabiha S. Zhang, Ping M. Hu, Zhuma M. Westenfelder, Christof PLoS One Research Article Novel biotherapies for Type 1 Diabetes that provide a significantly expanded donor pool and that deliver all islet hormones without requiring anti-rejection drugs are urgently needed. Scoring systems have improved islet allotransplantation outcomes, but their use may potentially result in the waste of valuable cells for novel therapies. To address these issues, we created “Neo-Islets” (NIs), islet-sized organoids, by co-culturing in ultralow adhesion flasks culture-expanded islet (ICs) and Mesenchymal Stromal Cells (MSCs) (x 24 hrs, 1:1 ratio). The MSCs exert powerful immune- and cyto-protective, anti-inflammatory, proangiogenic, and other beneficial actions in NIs. The robust in vitro expansion of all islet hormone-producing cells is coupled to their expected progressive de-differentiation mediated by serum-induced cell cycle entry and Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT). Re-differentiation in vivo of the ICs and resumption of their physiological functions occurs by reversal of EMT and serum withdrawal-induced exit from the cell cycle. Accordingly, we reported that allogeneic, i.p.-administered NIs engraft in the omentum, increase Treg numbers and reestablish permanent normoglycemia in autoimmune diabetic NOD mice without immunosuppression. Our FDA-guided pilot study (INAD 012–0776) in insulin-dependent pet dogs showed similar responses, and both human- and canine-NIs established normoglycemia in STZ-diabetic NOD/SCID mice even though the utilized islets would be scored as unsuitable for transplantation. The present study further demonstrates that islet gene expression profiles (α, β, γ, δ) in human “non-clinical grade” islets obtained from diverse, non-diabetic human and canine donors (n = 6 each) closely correlate with population doublings, and the in vivo re-differentiation of endocrine islet cells clearly corresponds with the reestablishment of euglycemia in diabetic mice. Conclusion: human-NIs created from diverse, “non-clinical grade” donors have the potential to greatly expand patient access to this curative therapy of T1DM, facilitated by the efficient in vitro expansion of ICs that can produce ~ 270 therapeutic NI doses per donor for 70 kg recipients. Public Library of Science 2023-08-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10449143/ /pubmed/37616230 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290460 Text en © 2023 Gooch et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gooch, Anna M.
Chowdhury, Sabiha S.
Zhang, Ping M.
Hu, Zhuma M.
Westenfelder, Christof
Significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “Neo-Islets”, 3-D organoids of Mesenchymal Stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for Type I Diabetes
title Significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “Neo-Islets”, 3-D organoids of Mesenchymal Stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for Type I Diabetes
title_full Significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “Neo-Islets”, 3-D organoids of Mesenchymal Stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for Type I Diabetes
title_fullStr Significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “Neo-Islets”, 3-D organoids of Mesenchymal Stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for Type I Diabetes
title_full_unstemmed Significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “Neo-Islets”, 3-D organoids of Mesenchymal Stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for Type I Diabetes
title_short Significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “Neo-Islets”, 3-D organoids of Mesenchymal Stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for Type I Diabetes
title_sort significant expansion of the donor pool achieved by utilizing islets of variable quality in the production of allogeneic “neo-islets”, 3-d organoids of mesenchymal stromal and islet cells, a novel immune-isolating biotherapy for type i diabetes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10449143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37616230
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290460
work_keys_str_mv AT goochannam significantexpansionofthedonorpoolachievedbyutilizingisletsofvariablequalityintheproductionofallogeneicneoislets3dorganoidsofmesenchymalstromalandisletcellsanovelimmuneisolatingbiotherapyfortypeidiabetes
AT chowdhurysabihas significantexpansionofthedonorpoolachievedbyutilizingisletsofvariablequalityintheproductionofallogeneicneoislets3dorganoidsofmesenchymalstromalandisletcellsanovelimmuneisolatingbiotherapyfortypeidiabetes
AT zhangpingm significantexpansionofthedonorpoolachievedbyutilizingisletsofvariablequalityintheproductionofallogeneicneoislets3dorganoidsofmesenchymalstromalandisletcellsanovelimmuneisolatingbiotherapyfortypeidiabetes
AT huzhumam significantexpansionofthedonorpoolachievedbyutilizingisletsofvariablequalityintheproductionofallogeneicneoislets3dorganoidsofmesenchymalstromalandisletcellsanovelimmuneisolatingbiotherapyfortypeidiabetes
AT westenfelderchristof significantexpansionofthedonorpoolachievedbyutilizingisletsofvariablequalityintheproductionofallogeneicneoislets3dorganoidsofmesenchymalstromalandisletcellsanovelimmuneisolatingbiotherapyfortypeidiabetes