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1.
Islet transplantation can reverse hyperglycaemia in Type 1 diabetes patients. One problem in islet transplantation is a loss of beta cell mass as well as blunted glucagon responses from the grafted islets. It has been suggested that alpha cell loss is associated with close contact of the alpha cells with the implantation organ. In the present study we made use of microencapsulation, where transplanted islets are not in direct contact with the host implantation site. After transplantation, the number of glucagon cells stained per microencapsulated islet section was increased whereas the number of insulin cells stained was decreased. DNA content of the islets was reduced, as was insulin content, whereas glucagon content was unchanged. This indicates that cell number in transplanted microencapsulated islets diminishes, which can be accounted for by loss of beta cells. However, in contrast to previous studies using non-encapsulated islets, alpha cell number seems to be maintained.  相似文献   

2.
Clinical islet transplantation is a promising treatment for patients with type 1 diabetes. However, pancreatic islets vary in size and shape affecting their survival and function after transplantation because of mass transport limitations. To reduce diffusion restrictions and improve islet cell survival, the generation of islets with optimal dimensions by dispersion followed by reassembly of islet cells, can help limit the length of diffusion pathways. This study describes a microwell platform that supports the controlled and reproducible production of three‐dimensional pancreatic cell clusters of human donor islets. We observed that primary human islet cell aggregates with a diameter of 100–150 μm consisting of about 1000 cells best resembled intact pancreatic islets as they showed low apoptotic cell death (<2%), comparable glucose‐responsiveness and increasing PDX1, MAFA and INSULIN gene expression with increasing aggregate size. The re‐associated human islet cells showed an a‐typical core shell configuration with beta cells predominantly on the outside unlike human islets, which became more randomized after implantation similar to native human islets. After transplantation of these islet cell aggregates under the kidney capsule of immunodeficient mice, human C‐peptide was detected in the serum indicating that beta cells retained their endocrine function similar to human islets. The agarose microwell platform was shown to be an easy and very reproducible method to aggregate pancreatic islet cells with high accuracy providing a reliable tool to study cell–cell interactions between insuloma and/or primary islet cells.  相似文献   

3.
The beta cells of the pancreatic islets, which maintain glucose homeostasis by secreting insulin, are important cells for sustaining life. In recent years, islet transplantation has been performed as a treatment for type I diabetes. Since there are not enough donors for patients awaiting transplantation, beta cells grown in vitro are expected to be utilized as a substitute for islets. To obtain the cells with properties of human beta cells, it is necessary to understand the process by which human pancreatic islets are formed, as well as their structural characteristics. By using undifferentiated cells, such as Xenopus laevis animal caps and mouse ES cells, pancreatic tissue has shown to be able to be induced in vitro. Various attempts have been made to obtain human beta cells from human ES/iPS cells. Versatile methods have been developed and improved efficiency has been achieved by the use of low molecular weight compounds, but the challenge remains to prevent tumor formation and achieve functional maturation. Inducing the differentiation of somatic stem cells into insulin-producing cells has also brought us closer to clinical application. There are still many challenges related to the practical use of beta cells derived from undifferentiated cells, such as the development of methods to substitute these cells for host beta cells, standardization of the treatment protocol, quality control, and confirmation of safety. Research on the methods of inducing undifferentiated cells to differentiate into beta cells has shown definite progress, suggesting that cell therapy for diabetes may become a preferred therapeutic option over islet transplantation.  相似文献   

4.
To clarify the cytoprotective effect of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) signaling in conditions of glucose toxicity in vivo, we performed murine isogenic islet transplantation with and without exendin-4 treatment. When a suboptimal number of islets (150) were transplanted into streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice, exendin-4 treatment contributed to the restoration of normoglycemia. When 50 islets expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) were transplanted, exendin-4 treatment reversed loss of both the number and mass of islet grafts one and 3 days after transplantation. TUNEL staining revealed that exendin-4 treatment reduced the number of apoptotic beta cells during the early posttransplant phase, indicating that GLP-1R signaling exerts its cytoprotective effect on pancreatic beta cells by inhibiting their apoptosis. This beneficial effect might be used both to ameliorate type 2 diabetes and to improve engraftment rates in clinical islet transplantation.  相似文献   

5.
Clinical studies have demonstrated that islet transplantation may be a useful procedure to replace beta cell function in patients with Type 1 diabetes. Islet transplantation faces many challenges, including complications associated with the procedure itself, the toxicity of immunosuppression regimens, and to the loss of islet function and insulin-independence with time. Despite the current successes, and residual challenges, these studies have pointed out an enormous scarcity of islet tissue that precludes the use of islet transplantation in a clinical setting on a wider scale. To address this problem, many research groups are trying to identify different islet growth factors and intracellular molecules capable of improving islet graft survival and function, therefore reducing the number of islets needed for successful transplantation. Among these growth factors, hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), a factor known to improve transplantation of a variety of organs/cells, has shown promising results in increasing islet graft survival and reducing the number of islets needed for successful transplantation in four different rodent models of islet transplantation. Protein kinase B (PKB)/Akt, a pro-survival intracellular signaling molecule is known to be activated in the beta cell by several different growth factors, including HGF. PKB/Akt has also shown promising results for improving human islet graft survival and function in a minimal islet mass model of islet transplantation in diabetic SCID mice. Increasing our knowledge on how HGF, PKB/Akt and other emerging molecules work for improving islet transplantation may provide substrate for future therapeutic approaches aimed at increasing the number of patients in which beta cell function can be successfully replaced.  相似文献   

6.
Developing a device that protects xenogeneic islets to allow treatment and potentially cure of diabetes in large mammals has been a major challenge in the past decade. Using xenogeneic islets for transplantation is required in light of donor shortage and the large number of diabetic patients that qualify for islet transplantation. Until now, however, host immunoreactivity against the xenogeneic graft has been a major drawback for the use of porcine islets. Our study demonstrates the applicability of a novel immunoprotective membrane that allows successful xenotransplantation of rat islets in diabetic minipigs without immunosuppressive therapy. Rat pancreatic islets were encapsulated in highly purified alginate and integrated into a plastic macrochamber covered by a poly-membrane for subcutaneous transplantation. Diabetic Sinclair pigs were transplanted and followed for up to 90 days. We demonstrated a persistent graft function and restoration of normoglycemia without the need for immunosuppressive therapy. This concept could potentially offer an attractive strategy for a more widespread islet replacement therapy that would restore endogenous insulin secretion in diabetic patients without the need for immunosuppressive drugs and may even open up an avenue for safe utilization of xenogeneic islet donors.  相似文献   

7.
For most patients with type I diabetes, insulin therapy and glucose monitoring are sufficient to maintain glycemic control. However, hypoglycemia is a potentially lethal side effect of insulin treatment in patients who are glycemically labile or have hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure [1]. For those patients, an alternative therapy is beta cell replacement via pancreas or islet transplantation. Pancreas transplants using cadaveric donor organs reduce insulin dependence but carry risks involved in major surgery and chronic immunosuppression. Islet transplantation, in which islets are isolated from donor pancreases and intravenously infused, require no surgery and can utilize islets isolated from pancreases unsuitable for whole organ transplantation. However, islet transplantation also requires immunosuppression, and standard steroid regimens may be toxic to beta cells [2]. The 2000 Edmonton Trial demonstrated the first long-term successful islet transplantation by using a glucocorticoid-free immunosuppressive regimen (sirolimus and tacrolimus). The Clinical Islet Transplantation (CIT) Consortium seeks to improve upon the Edmonton Protocol by using anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) and TNFα antagonist (etanercept). The trials currently in progress, in addition to research efforts to find new sources of islet cells, reflect enormous potential for islet transplantation in treatment of type I diabetes.  相似文献   

8.
Development of techniques for cryopreservation of pancreatic islets of Langerhans could potentially allow for increased freedom from the time restrictions presently affecting viability in islet cell transplantation. While several investigators have attempted islet cell freezing and have obtained favorable in vitro results after thawing, there have been few reported in vivo successes with islets transplanted after freezing. We have developed a simple system for freezing islet cell pancreatic fragments to ?196 °C and have either stored them in liquid nitrogen for 24 hr or immediately thawed the islets prior to transplantation. In addition, antilymphoblast globulin has been used as graft pretreatment modality in order to modify islet cell immunogenicity. We found that ALG was effective in prolongation of graft survival after freezing as well as on fresh nonfrozen transplants. The use of freezing and ALG appears, therefore, to have a favorable effect on the immunogenicity of the pancreatic islet cell allograft.  相似文献   

9.
Regenerative medicine using human or porcine β‐cells or islets has an excellent potential to become a clinically relevant method for the treatment of type‐1 diabetes. High‐resolution imaging of the function and faith of transplanted porcine pancreatic islets and human stem cell–derived beta cells in large animals and patients for testing advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMPs) is a currently unmet need for pre‐clinical/clinical trials. The iNanoBIT EU H2020 project is developing novel highly sensitive nanotechnology‐based imaging approaches allowing for monitoring of survival, engraftment, proliferation, function and whole‐body distribution of the cellular transplants in a porcine diabetes model with excellent translational potential to humans. We develop and validate the application of single‐photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and optoacoustic imaging technologies in a transgenic insulin‐deficient pig model to observe transplanted porcine xeno‐islets and in vitro differentiated human beta cells. We are progressing in generating new transgenic reporter pigs and human‐induced pluripotent cell (iPSC) lines for optoacoustic imaging and testing them in transplantable bioartificial islet devices. Novel multifunctional nanoparticles have been generated and are being tested for nuclear imaging of islets and beta cells using a new, high‐resolution SPECT imaging device. Overall, the combined multidisciplinary expertise of the project partners allows progress towards creating much needed technological toolboxes for the xenotransplantation and ATMP field, and thus reinforces the European healthcare supply chain for regenerative medicinal products.  相似文献   

10.
We used transgenesis to explore the requirement for downregulation of hepatocyte nuclear factor 6 (HNF6) expression in the assembly, differentiation, and function of pancreatic islets. In vivo, HNF6 expression becomes downregulated in pancreatic endocrine cells at 18. 5 days post coitum (d.p.c.), when definitive islets first begin to organize. We used an islet-specific regulatory element (pdx1(PB)) from pancreatic/duodenal homeobox (pdx1) gene to maintain HNF6 expression in endocrine cells beyond 18.5 d.p.c. Transgenic animals were diabetic. HNF6-overexpressing islets were hyperplastic and remained very close to the pancreatic ducts. Strikingly, alpha, delta, and PP cells were increased in number and abnormally intermingled with islet beta cells. Although several mature beta cell markers were expressed in beta cells of transgenic islets, the glucose transporter GLUT2 was absent or severely reduced. As glucose uptake/metabolism is essential for insulin secretion, decreased GLUT2 may contribute to the etiology of diabetes in pdx1(PB)-HNF6 transgenics. Concordantly, blood insulin was not raised by glucose challenge, suggesting profound beta cell dysfunction. Thus, we have shown that HNF6 downregulation during islet ontogeny is critical to normal pancreas formation and function: continued expression impairs the clustering of endocrine cells and their separation from the ductal epithelium, disrupts the spatial organization of endocrine cell types within the islet, and severely compromises beta cell physiology, leading to overt diabetes.  相似文献   

11.
Islet transplantation has become a widely accepted therapeutic option for selected patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus. However, in order to achieve insulin independence a great number of islets are often pooled from 2 to 4 pancreata donors. Mostly, it is due to the massive loss of islets immediately after transplant. The endothelium plays a key role in the function of native islets and during the revascularization process after islet transplantation. However, if a delayed revascularization occurs, even the remaining islets will also undergo to cell death and late graft dysfunction. Therefore, it is essential to understand how the signals are released from endothelial cells, which might regulate both differentiation of pancreatic progenitors and thereby maintenance of the graft function. New strategies to facilitate islet engraftment and a prompt revascularization could be designed to intervene and might lead to improve future results of islet transplantation.  相似文献   

12.
Polyclonal origin of pancreatic islets in aggregation mouse chimaeras.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
In the present study, we have examined the origin and growth pattern of the beta cells in pancreatic islets, to determine whether a single progenitor cell gave rise to all the precursors of the islets, or if each of a few progenitor cells is the founder of a different islet, or if each islet is a mixture of cells originating from a pool of progenitor cells. Aggregation mouse chimaeras where the pancreatic beta cells derived from each embryo can be identified in the islets on histological sections were analyzed. In two chimaeras, all the islets contained cells from both the aggregated embryo. This clearly demonstrates that each islet resulted from several independent cells. In addition, the beta cells derived from either embryo component were in very small clusters in the islets, suggesting that in situ cell division did not account significantly for islet growth.  相似文献   

13.
In vivo imaging of islet transplantation   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
Type 1 diabetes mellitus is characterized by the selective destruction of insulin-producing beta cells, which leads to a deficiency in insulin secretion and, as a result, to hyperglycemia. At present, transplantation of pancreatic islets is an emerging and promising clinical modality, which can render individuals with type 1 diabetes insulin independent without increasing the incidence of hypoglycemic events. To monitor transplantation efficiency and graft survival, reliable noninvasive imaging methods are needed. If such methods were introduced into the clinic, essential information could be obtained repeatedly and noninvasively. Here we report on the in vivo detection of transplanted human pancreatic islets using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that allowed noninvasive monitoring of islet grafts in diabetic mice in real time. We anticipate that the information obtained in this study would ultimately result in the ability to detect and monitor islet engraftment in humans, which would greatly aid the clinical management of this disease.  相似文献   

14.
Preservation of pancreatic islets for long-term storage of islets used for transplantation or research has long been a goal. Unfortunately, few studies on long-term islet cryopreservation (1 month and longer) have reported positive outcomes in terms of islet yield, survival and function. In general, single cells have been shown to tolerate the cryopreservation procedure better than tissues/multicellular structures like islets. Thus, we optimized a method to cryopreserve single islet cells and, after thawing, reaggregated them into islet spheroids. Cryopreserved (CP) single human islet cells formed spheroids efficiently within 3–5 days after thawing. Approximately 79% of islet cells were recovered following the single-cell cryopreservation protocol. Viability after long-term cryopreservation (4 weeks or more) was significantly higher in the CP islet cell spheroids (97.4 ± 0.4%) compared to CP native islets (14.6 ± 0.4%). Moreover, CP islet cell spheroids had excellent viability even after weeks in culture (88.5 ± 1.6%). Metabolic activity was 4–5 times higher in CP islet cell spheroids than CP native islets at 24 and 48 h after thawing. Diabetic rats transplanted with CP islet cell spheroids were normoglycemic for 10 months, identical to diabetic rats transplanted with fresh islets. However, the animals receiving fresh islets required a higher volume of transplanted tissue to achieve normoglycemia compared to those transplanted with CP islet cell spheroids. By cryopreserving single cells instead of intact islets, we achieved highly viable and functional islets after thawing that required lower tissue volumes to reverse diabetes in rats.  相似文献   

15.
The possibility that islets play a role in graft rejection during islet transplantation for type-1 diabetes patients holds promise for ex vivo islet manipulation and for specific anti-rejection therapy. Interleukin (IL)-15 is a T cell growth factor and chemoattractant that is expressed by non-T cells. Intragraft expression of IL-15 is elevated during acute rejection in patients and in mice, and systemic blockade of IL-15 in mice prolongs allograft survival. However, the source of IL-15 in these conditions is undetermined. Since epithelial cell-derived IL-15 promotes lymphocyte proliferation in culture, we sought to determine whether islet-derived IL-15 promotes rejection in mice.We designed antisense oligodeoxyribonucleotide molecules that target mouse IL-15. Uptake of FITC-labeled antisense molecules and efficacy of IL-15 inhibition in IFNgamma-stimulated islets were evaluated. Islets exhibited typical cytoplasmatic distribution of antisense molecules and produced IL-15 levels that were comparable to non-stimulated cells. Antisense-treated islet allografts, that were transplanted across multiple minor-histocompatibility-antigen mismatched strains of mice, were accepted at a higher rate than control-antisense treated islets or untreated islets (88.9% vs. 37.5% and 20%, respectively). Our results suggest that islet-derived IL-15 may be involved in acute islet allograft rejection.  相似文献   

16.
Regeneration therapy of pancreatic beta cells: towards a cure for diabetes?   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Regeneration therapy is an approach which could potentially move us towards a cure for type 1 diabetes. It is classified into three categories: (1) In vitro regeneration therapy using transplanted cultured cells, including ES cells, pancreatic stem cells, and beta-cell lines, in conjunction with immunosuppressive therapy or immunoisolation. (2) In ex vivo regeneration therapy, patients' own cells, such as bone marrow stem cells, are transiently removed and induced to differentiate into beta cells in vitro. At present, however, insulin-producing cells cannot be generated from bone marrow stem cells. (3) In in vivo regeneration therapy, impaired tissues regenerate from patients' own cells in vivo. beta-Cell neogenesis from non-beta-cells and beta-cell proliferation in vivo have been considered, particularly as regeneration therapies for type 2 diabetes. Regeneration therapy of pancreatic beta cells can be combined with various other therapeutic strategies, including islet transplantation, cell-based therapy, gene therapy, and drug therapy to promote beta-cell proliferation and neogenesis, and it is hoped that these strategies will, in the future, provide a cure for diabetes.  相似文献   

17.
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) is characterized by a heightened antibody (Ab) response to pancreatic islet self-antigens, which is a biomarker of progressive islet pathology. We recently identified a novel antibody to clade B serpin that reduces islet-associated T cell accumulation and is linked to the delayed onset of T1D. As natural immunity to clade B arises early in life, we hypothesized that it may influence islet development during that time. To test this possibility healthy young Balb/c male mice were injected with serpin B13 mAb or IgG control and examined for the number and cellularity of pancreatic islets by immunofluorescence and FACS. Beta cell proliferation was assessed by measuring nucleotide analog 5-ethynyl-2′-deoxyuridine (5-EdU) incorporation into the DNA and islet Reg gene expression was measured by real time PCR. Human studies involved measuring anti-serpin B13 autoantibodies by Luminex. We found that injecting anti-serpin B13 monoclonal Ab enhanced beta cell proliferation and Reg gene expression, induced the generation of ∼80 pancreatic islets per animal, and ultimately led to increase in the beta cell mass. These findings are relevant to human T1D because our analysis of subjects just diagnosed with T1D revealed an association between baseline anti-serpin activity and slower residual beta cell function decline in the first year after the onset of diabetes. Our findings reveal a new role for the anti-serpin immunological response in promoting adaptive changes in the endocrine pancreas and suggests that enhancement of this response could potentially help impede the progression of T1D in humans.  相似文献   

18.
Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is an autoimmune disease that causes a progressive destruction of the pancreatic beta cells. As a result, the patient requires exogenous insulin to maintain normal blood glucose levels. Both the pancreas and the islets of Langerhans have been transplanted successfully in humans and in animal models, resulting in full normalization of glucose homeostasis. However, insulin independence, transient or persistent, was documented in only a small fraction of cases until recently. The chronic immunosuppression required to avoid immunological rejection appears to be toxic to the islets and adds the risk of lymphoproliferative disease reported earlier. For islet transplantation to become the method of choice, it is essential first to identify islet-friendly immunosuppressive regimens and/or to develop methods that induce donor-specific tolerance and improve islet isolation and transplantation protocols. Indeed, researchers have already successfully allografted islets in the presence of nonsteroidal immunosuppression in a process known as the Edmonton protocol. An alternative method, gene therapy, could replace these other methods and better meet the insulin requirement of an individual without requiring pancreatic or islet transplantation. This alternative, however, requires animal models to develop and test clinical protocols and to demonstrate the feasibility of preclinical trials. Nonhuman primates are ideally suited to achieve these goals. The efforts toward developing a nonhuman primate diabetic model with demonstrable insulin dependence are discussed and include pancreatic and islet transplant trials to reverse the diabetic state and achieve insulin independence. Also described are the various protocols that have been tested in primates to circumvent immunosuppression by using tolerance induction strategies in lieu of immunosuppression, thus exploring the field of donor-specific tolerance that extends beyond islet transplantation.  相似文献   

19.
The regenerative process of the pancreas is of interest because the main pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus is an inadequate number of insulin-producing β-cells. The functional mass of β-cells is decreased in type 1 diabetes, so replacing missing β-cells or triggering their regeneration may allow for improved type 1 diabetes treatment. Therefore, expansion of the β-cell mass from endogenous sources, either in vivo or in vitro, represents an area of increasing interest. The mechanism of islet regeneration remains poorly understood, but the identification of islet progenitor sources is critical for understanding β-cell regeneration. One potential source is the islet proper, via the dedifferentiation, proliferation, and redifferentiation of facultative progenitors residing within the islet. Neogenesis, or that the new pancreatic islets can derive from progenitor cells present within the ducts has been reported, but the existence and identity of the progenitor cells have been debated.In this review, we focus on pancreatic ductal cells, which are islet progenitors capable of differentiating into islet β-cells. Islet neogenesis, seen as budding of hormone-positive cells from the ductal epithelium, is considered to be one mechanism for normal islet growth after birth and in regeneration, and has suggested the presence of pancreatic stem cells. Numerous results support the neogenesis hypothesis, the evidence for the hypothesis in the adult comes primarily from morphological studies that have in common the production of damage to all or part of the pancreas, with consequent inflammation and repair. Although numerous studies support a ductal origin for new islets after birth, lineage-tracing experiments are considered the “gold standard” of proof. Lineage-tracing experiments show that pancreatic duct cells act as progenitors, giving rise to new islets after birth and after injury. The identification of differentiated pancreatic ductal cells as an in vivo progenitor for pancreatic β-cells has implications for a potentially important, expandable source of new islets for diabetic replenishment therapy.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

Since the advent of islet transplantation, there has been a significant emphasis on the importance of islet purity despite an inevitable associated loss of islet mass during the purification process. One of the key elements of the 'Edmonton Protocol' for islet transplantation published in 2000 was an emphasis on the need for sequential transplants of highly purified islets (averaging 24% beta cell purity) and the close correlation between the numbers of islets transplanted and the success of the procedure. However, the emphasis on islet purity may warrant further consideration as auto transplantation of non-purified islets currently provides the most successful insulin independence rates within the field of islet transplantation. While the role of auto and allo immunity could contribute to the differences in the success rates it is clear that within the clinical setting, significant acinar and ductal contamination is well tolerated. However, one could go further and hypothesize that extra-insular tissue including acinar tissue, ductal tissue, peri-pancreatic lymph nodes and vascular tissue actually confer an advantage to islet survival/function and may even contribute to the insulin secreting capacity of the graft post transplant. As such this review will assess the influence of extra-insular pancreatic tissue on the results of islet transplantation based on published evidence and will also explore the possibility that non-islet pancreatic cells are capable of differentiating into a beta cell phenotype in vivo contributing to an ongoing regeneration of endocrine mass during the period following transplantation.  相似文献   

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