Publication | Open Access
A Dual Reporter EndoC-βH1 Human β-Cell Line for Efficient Quantification of Calcium Flux and Insulin Secretion
11
Citations
27
References
2020
Year
Molecular RegulationMolecular BiologyCellular PhysiologyInsulin SignalingProtein ExpressionEfficient QuantificationGene DisruptionCell SignalingCell PhysiologyDual Reporter LineMolecular SignalingMolecular PhysiologyEndocrine MechanismTranslational ProteomicsGene ExpressionCell BiologyCalcium FluxSignal TransductionNatural SciencesPhysiologyInsulin SecretionCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicineCrispr-cas9 System
Human in vitro model systems of diabetes are critical to both study disease pathophysiology and offer a platform for drug testing. We have generated a set of tools in the human β-cell line EndoC-βH1 that allows the efficient and inexpensive characterization of β-cell physiology and phenotypes driven by disruption of candidate genes. First, we generated a dual reporter line that expresses a preproinsulin-luciferase fusion protein along with GCaMP6s. This reporter line allows the quantification of insulin secretion by measuring luciferase activity and calcium flux, a critical signaling step required for insulin secretion, via fluorescence microscopy. Using these tools, we demonstrate that the generation of the reporter human β-cell line was highly efficient and validated that luciferase activity could accurately reflect insulin secretion. Second, we used a lentiviral vector carrying the CRISPR-Cas9 system to generate candidate gene disruptions in the reporter line. We also show that we can achieve gene disruption in ~90% of cells using a CRISPR-Cas9 lentiviral system. As a proof of principle, we disrupt the β-cell master regulator, PDX1, and show that mutant EndoC-βH1 cells display impaired calcium responses and fail to secrete insulin when stimulated with high glucose. Furthermore, we show that PDX1 mutant EndoC-βH1 cells exhibit decreased expression of the β-cell-specific genes MAFA and NKX6.1 and increased GCG expression. The system presented here provides a platform to quickly and easily test β-cell functionality in wildtype and cells lacking a gene of interest.
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