| Literature DB >> 27752182 |
Jamal Mohammadi Ayenehdeh1,2, Bahareh Niknam2,3, Seyed Mahmoud Hashemi4, Hossein Rahavi2, Nima Rezaei1,5,6, Masoud Soleimani7, Nader Tajik2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Islet transplantation could be an ideal alternative treatment to insulin therapy for type 1 diabetes Mellitus (T1DM). This clinical and experimental field requires a model that covers problems such as requiring a large number of functional and viable islets, the optimal transplantation site, and the prevention of islet dispersion. Hence, the methods of choice for isolation of functional islets and transplantation are crucial.Entities:
Keywords: Islet pancreas; Isolation; Transplantation; Type 1 diabetes mellitus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27752182 PMCID: PMC5459937 DOI: 10.18869/acadpub.ibj.21.4.218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran Biomed J ISSN: 1028-852X
Fig. 1The inflation of the pancreas. Inflated pancreases are shown in both Petri dishes. Its swollen appearance was seen (A). Inflated pancreas is shown next to a freshly isolated pancreas (B). The inflated pancreas is approximately five fold larger than the freshly isolated ones.
Fig. 2Isolated mouse pancreatic islets. The islets were obtained by two methods of hand-picking (A and C) and Ficoll separation (B and D). The parts of C and D show the same islets after dithizone staining. Images were acquired on an inverted microscope at 40× magnification. Scale bars represent 200 μm.
The comparison of islet purification by hand-picking isolation (HPI) versus Ficoll gradient separation (FGS) methods in BALB/c mice as donors
| Criteria | Islet isolation method (mean±SD) | |
|---|---|---|
| HPI | FGS | |
| Time consumption[ | 55.4±9.8 | 42.7±10.4 |
| Purity[ | 94.2±2.3 | 78.6±6.7 |
| Yield[ | 174.5±26.7 | 136.3±12.2 |
| Viability[ | 96.2±3.2 | 82.6±4.5 |
Time consumption (min) from pancreas removal to islet purification;
Purity rate (%) of the islets by color discrimination from accinar cells under dithizone staining.
Yield is expressed as the number of islets obtained per pancreas.
Viability was determined as the ratio of viable to non-viable islets or necrotic islets under an inverted microscope (4× objective lens). The numbers represent the mean values±standard deviation of six independent experiments, each involving six mice.
Fig. 3Insulin secretion from the purified islets by two procedures. Glucose-mediated insulin secretion is in equal numbers and sizes of the purified mouse islets by HPI and FGS. T0, T1, and T2 indicate the islets incubated with control medium, 150 mg/dl glucose, and 300 mg/dl glucose for 60 minutes, respectively. Data are presented as the mean±SD of six independent experiments (n=6). **P<0.01; ***P<0.001.
Fig. 4Blood glucose levels in the transplanted mice. (A) Blood glucose levels and (B) general regression in the transplanted mice. Streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice were transplanted with two pieces of 100 µl hydrogel, each containing 100 islets. Data are presented as the mean values of n=6 animals/group±SD.
Fig. 5Histopathology of the grafts. The grafts were isolated after 20 days post transplantation and stained with H&E. The Figure shows a representative section with intact islets (arrow) in the hydrogel and absence of immune cell infiltration. Scale bar represents 200 μm.