Publication: How to make a functional β-cell
Date
2013
Published Version
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Publisher
The Company of Biologists
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Citation
Pagliuca, F. W., and D. A. Melton. 2013. “How to Make a Functional β-Cell.” Development 140 (12) (June 15): 2472–2483. doi:10.1242/dev.093187.
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Abstract
Insulin-secreting pancreatic β-cells are essential regulators of mammalian metabolism. The absence of functional β-cells leads to hyperglycemia and diabetes, making patients dependent on exogenously supplied insulin. Recent insights into β-cell development, combined with the discovery of pluripotent stem cells, have led to an unprecedented opportunity to generate new β-cells for transplantation therapy and drug screening. Progress has also been made in converting terminally differentiated cell types into β-cells using transcriptional regulators identified as key players in normal development, and in identifying conditions that induce β-cell replication in vivo and in vitro. Here, we summarize what is currently known about how these strategies could be utilized to generate new β-cells and highlight how further study into the mechanisms governing later stages of differentiation and the acquisition of functional capabilities could inform this effort.
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