| Literature DB >> 29354869 |
Piero Marchetti1, Mara Suleiman2, Lorella Marselli2.
Abstract
Direct in vivo assessment of pancreatic islet-cells for the study of the pathophysiology of diabetes in humans is hampered by anatomical and technological hurdles. To date, most of the information that has been generated is derived from histological studies performed on pancreatic tissue from autopsy, surgery, in vivo biopsy or organ donation. Each approach has its advantages and disadvantages (as summarised in this commentary); however, in this edition of Diabetologia, Kusmartseva et al ( https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-017-4494-x ) provide further evidence to support the use of organ donor pancreases for the study of human diabetes. They show that length of terminal hospitalisation of organ donors prior to death does not seem to influence the frequency of inflammatory cells infiltrating the pancreas and the replication of beta cells. These findings are reassuring, demonstrating the reliability of this precious and valuable resource for human islet cells research.Entities:
Keywords: Autoptic samples; Beta cells; Islet cells; Organ donors; Pancreatectomy; Pancreatic biopsies
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29354869 PMCID: PMC6449064 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-018-4546-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Fig. 1Representative images, obtained by light or electron microscopy, of pancreatic samples yielded from organ donors. (a) Immunofluorescence analysis of an islet from a donor without diabetes; insulin containing cells are in red, glucagon containing cells are in green (M. Suleiman, personal communication). (b) Immunofluorescence analysis of an islet containing a beta cell with an apoptotic nucleus (white arrow); insulin containing cells are in red, the apoptotic nucleus is in green (TUNEL staining). Scale bars in (a) and (b), 20 μm. (c) An apoptotic beta cell visualised by electron microscopy; the yellow arrow indicates an apoptotic nucleus with marked chromatin condensation, the red arrows indicate insulin granules. Magnification ×10,000. (d, e) Electron micrograph showing immune cells infiltrating the pancreas. In (d), the yellow arrows indicate a macrophage and red arrows indicate insulin granules in a beta cell adjacent to the macrophage. In (e) the yellow arrow points to a mast cell. Scale bars in (d) and (e), 1 μm. (f) Electron micrograph showing a beta cell with signs of death associated with altered autophagy (note the cytoplasm engulfed with lysosomes [multigranular bodies]); the yellow arrow indicates the nucleus without evidence of apoptotic features, the red arrows point to some remaining insulin granules. Magnification ×7000. Figure parts (b), (d) and (e) adapted from [29] with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2015; figure parts (c) and (f) adapted from [31] with permission from Springer Nature, copyright 2009
Main advantages and disadvantages of pancreas sources
| Source | Advantages | Disadvantages | Overall tissue quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Autopsy | Access to the whole pancreas | Possible postmortem artefacts | Fair to good |
| Surgery | Minimal CIT | Limited amount of tissue | Very good |
| Biopsy | The pancreatic tissue source closest to the in vivo situation | Limited amount of tissue | Excellent |
| Organ donation | Transplantation-grade procedures | Limited information on family and clinical history | Very good |