Modeling Diabetes with Stem
Cells Reprogrammed adult cells could be used to reconstruct diabetes in the
laboratory
A technique that allows the insulin-producing cells that are destroyed by type 1
diabetes to be re-created in the lab could help researchers understand how the
disease develops and perhaps lead to more effective treatments for the
condition.
A study published today in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences describes
a way to create induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from ordinary adult cells
taken from patients with type 1 diabetes. These stem cells then can be
reprogrammed to produce all of the cell types relevant to the disease.
"What you get is the ability to watch, for the first time, type 1 diabetes
develop," says senior author Douglas Melton, a professor of natural sciences at Harvard
University and co-director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. "Until you watch a disease
develop, you will not understand the mechanism, and you therefore cannot devise
any kind of sensible treatment or cure."

Melton and his colleagues show that the reprogrammed iPS cells--so called for
their ability to give rise to many cell types--can be spurred to differentiate
into tissue resembling the insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells that are
destroyed by the immune system in type 1 diabetes.
Embryonic stem (ES) cells have long been the gold standard for deriving
pluripotent cell lines. But ES cells can only be used to create disease models
for disorders such as cystic fibrosis, where the genetic underpinnings are
straightforward. Because the genetics underlying type 1diabetes are complex and
poorly understood, researchers have no way to identify diabetes-specific ES
cells.
Therefore, iPS cells derived from patients known to be diabetic offer the
best hope for modeling the disease by allowing researchers to generate
diabetes-specific versions of all the relevant cell types: the pancreatic beta
cells, the immune cells that destroy them, and the thymus cells that orchestrate
their destruction.
By creating all these cell types from a single diabetic patient, it's
essentially possible to reconstruct the disease in a laboratory, says Jeanne
Loring, founding director of the Center for
Regenerative Medicine at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA.
"It's completely mind boggling that you can actually study human disease in a
dish," says Loring, who was not involved in the new work. |