A prioritized medium-throughput screen on human stem cell derived insulin secreting beta cells identifies FGF4, FGF5, FGF8F, FGF19 and FGF21 as protective factors

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Abstract

Insulin is produced by pancreatic β cells, whose dysfunction and death are hallmarks of diabetes. Stem cell-derived β-like cells (SCβ cells) are a potential alternative to cadaveric islets for replacement therapy. However, SCβ cells face a multitude of stresses, including hypoxia, hyperglycemia, ER stress, inflammation, and autoimmunity that must be overcome for this treatment to cure diabetes. Pancreatic β cells and SCβ cells reside in complex microtissues (islets or spheroids) and can therefore be potentially modulated by hundreds of autocrine and paracrine signals. Here, we leveraged scRNAseq, bulk RNAseq, and bulk proteomics data from late stage SCβ cells and human islets to map potential ligand-receptor pairs in these tissues and generate a prioritized list of ligands for high-content SCβ cell survival screening. We tracked cell number with Hoechst 33342, cell death using propidium iodide incorporation, and INS activity from INS -EGFP knock-in reporter human embryonic stem cells over several days using high throughput imaging. Members of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family significantly prevented cytokine induced cell death, with the top validated hits being FGF4, FGF5, FGF19, FGF21, and FGF8F. These results have the potential to improve SCβ cell survival with pathways that are readily targetable and translatable to the clinic.

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