Stem cells for pancreatic β-cell replacement in diabetes mellitus: actual perspectives (original) (raw)

Purpose of review Type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus represent a widespread metabolic disorder, related to autoimmune b-cell destruction and insulin resistance, leading to b-cell dysfunction, respectively, that are associated with severe chronic complications with irreversible multiorgan morphological and functional damage. Conventional treatment, based on exogenous insulin or oral agents may control and delay but not prevent the disease complications, which has lead, so far, to a steady increase in mortality and morbidity. b-Cell substitution cell therapy, initially pursued by whole pancreatic and isolated islet transplantation, with scarce and limited efficiency, now is looking at the new technologies for cell and molecular therapy for diabetes, based on stem cells. Recent findings Pancreatic endocrine cells regeneration might replenish the destroyed b-cell pool, with neogenerated b-cell derived from pancreatic and extrapancreatic stem cell sources. Additionally, embryonic or adult stem cells derived from different cell lineages, and able to differentiate into b-like cell elements, may not only restore the original insulin secretory patterns but also exert the immunomodulatory effects aimed at interrupting the b-cell-directed autoimmune destruction vicious cycle.

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