TAT-mediated neurogenin 3 protein transduction stimulates pancreatic endocrine differentiation in vitro

被引:59
作者
Domínguez-Bendala, J
Klein, D
Ribeiro, M
Ricordi, C
Inverardi, L
Pastori, R
Edlund, H
机构
[1] Univ Miami, Sch Med, Diabet Res Inst, Miami, FL 33136 USA
[2] Umea Univ, Ctr Mol Med, Umea, Sweden
关键词
D O I
10.2337/diabetes.54.3.720
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Stem cell technologies hold great potential for the treatment of type I diabetes, provided that functional transplantable R-cells can be selectively generated in an efficient manner. Such a process should recapitulate, at least to a certain extent, the embryonic development of beta-cells in vitro. However, progress at identifying the transcription factors involved in P-cell development has not been accompanied by a parallel success at unraveling the pattern of their instructive extracellular signals. Here we present proof of principle of a novel approach to circumvent this problem, based on the use of the HIV/TAT protein transduction domain. Neurogenin 3 (ngn3), a factor whose expression is essential for Pancreatic endocrine differentiation, was fused to the TAT domain. Administration of TAT/ngn3 to cultured pancreatic explants results in efficient uptake, nuclear translocation, and stimulation of downstream reporter and endogenous genes. Consistent with the predicted activity of the protein, e9.5 and e13.5 mouse pancreatic explants cultured in the presence of TAT/ngn3 show an increased level of endocrine differentiation compared with control samples. Our results raise the possibility of sequentially specifying stem/progenitor cells toward the P-cell lineage, by using the appropriate sequence and combination of TAT-fused transcription factors.
引用
收藏
页码:720 / 726
页数:7
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]  
Ahlgren U, 1996, DEVELOPMENT, V122, P1409
[2]   Notch signalling controls pancreatic cell differentiation [J].
Apelqvist, Å ;
Li, H ;
Sommer, L ;
Beatus, P ;
Anderson, DJ ;
Honjo, T ;
de Angelis, MH ;
Lendahl, U ;
Edlund, H .
NATURE, 1999, 400 (6747) :877-881
[3]   Acute toxicity after high-dose systemic injection of helper-dependent adenoviral vectors into nonhuman primates [J].
Brunetti-Pierri, N ;
Palmer, DJ ;
Beaudet, AL ;
Carey, KD ;
Finegold, M ;
Ng, P .
HUMAN GENE THERAPY, 2004, 15 (01) :35-46
[4]   Antennapedia and HIV transactivator of transcription (TAT) "protein transduction domains" promote endocytosis of high molecular weight cargo upon binding to cell surface glycosaminoglycans [J].
Console, S ;
Marty, C ;
García-Echeverría, C ;
Schwendener, R ;
Ballmer-Hofer, K .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2003, 278 (37) :35109-35114
[5]   A novel TAT-mitochondrial signal sequence fusion protein is processed, stays in mitochondria, and crosses the placenta [J].
Del Gaizo, V ;
Payne, RM .
MOLECULAR THERAPY, 2003, 7 (06) :720-730
[6]   Elevated expression of exogenous Rad51 leads to identical increases in gene-targeting frequency in murine embryonic stem (ES) cells with both functional and dysfunctional p53 genes [J].
Domínguez-Bendala, J ;
Priddle, H ;
Clarke, A ;
McWhir, J .
EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH, 2003, 286 (02) :298-307
[7]   Factors controlling pancreatic cell differentiation and function [J].
Edlund, H .
DIABETOLOGIA, 2001, 44 (09) :1071-1079
[8]   Proteins linked to a protein transduction domain efficiently transduce pancreatic islets [J].
Embury, J ;
Klein, D ;
Pileggi, A ;
Ribeiro, M ;
Jayaraman, S ;
Molano, RD ;
Fraker, C ;
Kenyon, N ;
Ricordi, C ;
Inverardi, L ;
Pastori, RL .
DIABETES, 2001, 50 (08) :1706-1713
[9]   TAT-MEDIATED DELIVERY OF HETEROLOGOUS PROTEINS INTO CELLS [J].
FAWELL, S ;
SEERY, J ;
DAIKH, Y ;
MOORE, C ;
CHEN, LL ;
PEPINSKY, B ;
BARSOUM, J .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1994, 91 (02) :664-668
[10]   Caveolae-mediated internalization of extracellular HIV-1 tat fusion proteins visualized in real time [J].
Ferrari, A ;
Pellegrini, V ;
Arcangeli, C ;
Fittipaldi, A ;
Giacca, M ;
Beltram, F .
MOLECULAR THERAPY, 2003, 8 (02) :284-294