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First published online May 11, 2005
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2004-0288v1
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Submitted on October 20, 2004
Accepted on April 25, 2005

Rapid Communication

Sequestration and Synthesis: The Source of Insulin in Cell Clusters Differentiated from Murine Embryonic Stem Cells

Hyun Joon Paek 1*, Leonard Jeffrey Moise 1, Jeffrey R. Morgan 1, Michael J. Lysaght 1

1 Center for Biomedical Engineering, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Hyun_Paek{at}brown.edu.


   Abstract

The source of insulin released from insulin-releasing cell clusters differentiated from embryonic stem cells remains unclear. Rajagopal et al have suggested that IRCCs do not synthesize but secrete insulin which had been absorbed from media during the multi-step protocol. We report here further data relevant to this controversy. (1) No radioisotopic labeling of insulin was observed when IRCCs were incubated in a medium containing 35S-cysteine. (2) Less than 1% of the extracellular stoichiometric C-peptide equivalent to insulin was secreted during glucose stimulation. (3) However, intracellular immunostaining and immunogold labeling were both positive for C-peptide. (4) Finally, a mass balance calculation showed that simple equilibration of IRCCs by Fickian diffusion from media accounted for at most 4% of secreted insulin. These findings and further analysis of the results of others suggest that the mechanism of insulin secretion by IRCCs is a combination of sequestration and de-novo synthesis.




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A. S. Boyd, D. C. Wu, Y. Higashi, and K. J. Wood
A Comparison of Protocols Used to Generate Insulin-Producing Cell Clusters from Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells
Stem Cells, May 1, 2008; 26(5): 1128 - 1137.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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