Literature DB >> 12774167

Formation of insulin-positive cells in implants of human pancreatic duct cell preparations from young donors.

M Bogdani1, V Lefebvre, N Buelens, T Bock, M Pipeleers-Marichal, P In't Veld, D Pipeleers.   

Abstract

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Pancreatic ducts are considered as potential sites for neogenesis of beta cells. In vitro studies have reported formation of islets from postnatal human and rodent duct tissue. We examined whether postnatal human duct-cell preparations can generate new beta cells after transplantation.
METHODS: Pancreatic duct cells were prepared from the non-endocrine fraction of human donor pancreases that were processed for islet-cell isolation. Grafts containing 0.5 million duct cells with 1% contaminating insulin-positive cells were implanted under the kidney capsule of normoglycaemic nude mice. At 0.5 and 10 weeks post-transplantation, implants were examined for their cellular composition and for the volumes of their composing cell populations, i.e. cytokeratin 19-positive duct cells, synaptophysin-, insulin- and glucagon-positive endocrine cells.
RESULTS: Between week 0.5 and 10, duct-cell volume decreased by at least 90% whereas the change in insulin-positive cell volume depended on donor age. Implants from donors over 10 years had a threefold decrease in their insulin-positive cell volume, while those from donors under 10 years had a 2.5-fold increase. After 10 weeks, the implants from the younger donors consisted of 19% insulin-positive cells occurring as single units or small cell clusters. Three percent of these insulin-positive cells also expressed the ductal marker CK 19 and were consistently found in conjunction with ductal epithelia; up to 1% was positive for the proliferation marker BrdU and located in small endocrine cell clusters. CONCLUSIONS/
INTERPRETATION: These data indicate that duct cell preparations from donors under 10 years can generate insulin-positive cells. This process might involve differentiation of CK 19-positive-insulin cells that are formed at the duct epithelia as well as proliferation of insulin-positive cells within endocrine cell aggregates.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12774167     DOI: 10.1007/s00125-003-1118-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetologia        ISSN: 0012-186X            Impact factor:   10.122


  40 in total

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6.  In vitro cultivation of human islets from expanded ductal tissue.

Authors:  S Bonner-Weir; M Taneja; G C Weir; K Tatarkiewicz; K H Song; A Sharma; J J O'Neil
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7.  Human pancreatic beta-cell deoxyribonucleic acid-synthesis in islet grafts decreases with increasing organ donor age but increases in response to glucose stimulation in vitro.

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9.  Cytokeratins as markers of ductal cell differentiation and islet neogenesis in the neonatal rat pancreas.

Authors:  L Bouwens; R N Wang; E De Blay; D G Pipeleers; G Klöppel
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10.  Embryogenesis of the murine endocrine pancreas; early expression of pancreatic polypeptide gene.

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Review 7.  How, When, and Where Do Human β-Cells Regenerate?

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