| Literature DB >> 28730558 |
Rebecca A Stokes1,2,3, Denbigh M Simond3,4,5, Heather Burns3,5, Anita T Patel3,4, Philip J O'Connell3,4,5, Jenny E Gunton1,2,4,6, Wayne J Hawthorne7,8,9.
Abstract
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Xenotransplantation has great potential to provide beta cell replacement and thereby provide a cure for large numbers of people with type 1 diabetes. Crucial to the success of xenotransplantation is establishment of the most viable sites for transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: Experimental diabetes mellitus; Islet transplantation; Xenotransplantation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28730558 PMCID: PMC6448811 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-017-4363-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Fig. 1Porcine islet transplants and graft function. (a–c) Daily blood glucose levels (BGLs) at 120 days post-transplant were superior in pigs with kidney-transplanted grafts (n = 6) (a) compared with those with liver capsule-transplanted grafts (n = 6) (c) and the most inferior spleen-transplanted grafts (n = 6) (p = 0.007) (b). Arrow indicates native pancreatectomy. (d–f) Islet function was determined by IVGTT. Blood glucose response was superior in pigs with kidney-transplanted grafts (n = 6) (d) compared with spleen-transplanted grafts (n = 6) (e); peak BGL, **p < 0.01 for spleen vs kidney graft recipients, and no different in pigs with liver capsule-transplanted grafts (n = 6) (f). †p < 0.05 for time to return to baseline glucose vs both kidney and liver-graft recipients. Recipients with kidney-transplanted grafts had the fastest return to basal glucose of 60 min, followed by liver capsule-transplanted recipients at 72 min and spleen-transplanted recipients at 118 min. (g–i) The insulin response (measured by RIA) was better in pigs with kidney-transplanted grafts (g) than in those with spleen-transplanted grafts (h) (¶¶ p < 0.01); there was a lower response in recipients of islet transplants into liver capsule (i) (not statistically significant, p = 0.068 vs kidney). The kidney-transplanted graft had slower initial insulin peak and significant second-phase insulin release
Fig. 2Histological analysis of porcine islet transplants. Graft biopsies were sectioned and stained as described in Methods. (a) Porcine islet allografts under the kidney, spleen or liver capsule 120 days after transplantation showed strong staining for chromogranin A. (b–d) Approximately 80% of islet cells showed strong insulin (b), glucagon (c) and somatostatin staining (d). (e) The intensity of CD31 endothelial staining was similar in all tissue types. Scale bars, 400 μm (for figures under the Kidney and Spleen columns) and 200 μm (for figures under the Liver capsule column). Black arrows indicate the site of CD31-positive endothelial staining