학술논문

Adult human exocrine pancreas differentiation to hepatocytes – potential source of a human hepatocyte progenitor for use in toxicology research
Document Type
Article
Source
Toxicology Research; 2013, Vol. 2 Issue: 1 p80-87, 8p
Subject
Language
ISSN
2045452X; 20454538
Abstract
Reduction in the use of animals in toxicology is an important goal despite the continued need to assess drug and chemical safety in man. However, a limitation to in vitroscreening for drug and chemical toxicity is the lack of available human hepatocytes and the difficulties associated with generating fully functional hepatocytes from stem cells. Previously, we have shown that a rat pancreatic acinar cell line is capable of trans-differentiating into fully functional hepatocyte-like cells in response to glucocorticoid viaa serine/threonine protein kinase mechanism alone. Here we demonstrated that differentiation only occurs with glucocorticoids, not other steroids. We also investigated the potential of human pancreatic cells to undergo the same process. Analysis of adult human pancreata at the level of mRNA, protein and by immunohistochemical staining demonstrated that long term systemic exposure to glucocorticoid therapy resulted in differentiation of exocrine tissue to hepatocyte-like tissue. Glucocorticoid treatment of human pancreatic acinar cells in culture also resulted in trans-differentiation to hepatocyte-like cells. Both in vivoand in vitro, trans-differentiation of pancreas cells to hepatocytes was associated with an induction of SGK1 variant transcripts that have been previously shown to drive B-13 differentiation to hepatocytes. Adult exocrine human pancreas therefore responds in a similar qualitative fashion to that previously observed in rodents exposed to elevated glucocorticoid – that of a differentiation into hepatocyte-like cells. Understanding the enhanced response of B-13 cells to glucocorticoid and engineering this response in a replicating human acinar cell could generate an unlimited supply of functional human hepatocytes in vitrothat could be useful in a variety of applications, including screening drugs and chemicals for hepatic metabolism and toxicity.