| Literature DB >> 32855170 |
Thomas Pomposelli1, Ping Wang2,3, Kazuhiro Takeuchi1, Katsunori Miyake1, Yuichi Ariyoshi1, Hironosuke Watanabe1, Xiaojuan Chen1, Akira Shimizu1, Neil Robertson2,3, Kazuhiko Yamada4, Anna Moore5,3.
Abstract
The long-term success of pancreatic islet transplantation (Tx) as a cure for type 1 diabetes remains limited. Islet loss after Tx related to apoptosis, inflammation, and other factors continues to limit Tx efficacy. In this project, we demonstrate a novel approach aimed at protecting islets before Tx in nonhuman primates (NHPs) (baboons) by silencing a gene (caspase-3) responsible for induction of apoptosis. This was done using siRNA (siCas-3) conjugated to magnetic nanoparticles (MNs). In addition to serving as carriers for siCas-3, these nanoparticles also act as reporters for MRI, so islets labeled with MN-siCas-3 can be monitored in vivo after Tx. In vitro studies showed the antiapoptotic effect of MN-siCas-3 on islets in culture, resulting in minimal islet loss. For in vivo studies, donor baboon islets were labeled with MN-siCas-3 and infused into recipient diabetic subjects. A dramatic reduction in insulin requirements was observed in animals transplanted with even a marginal number of labeled islets compared with controls. By demonstrating the protective effect of MN-siCas-3 in the challenging NHP model, this study proposes a novel strategy to minimize the number of donor islets required from either cadaveric or living donors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32855170 PMCID: PMC7576559 DOI: 10.2337/db20-0517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
Figure 1A: Schematic representation of MN-siCas-3 probe. The probe consisted of iron oxide nanoparticles conjugated to five Cy5.5 molecules and seven to eight molecules of siRNA to caspase-3. B: Timeline for the experimental and control groups. Diabetes was induced using STZ on POD −7. Donor pancreatectomy and islet isolation were performed on POD −2, followed by culture with the probes. On POD −1, the recipients underwent induction therapy and continued with the immunosuppression protocol throughout the course of the experiment. Islets were removed from culture on POD 0 and infused into the recipient’s portal circulation.
Experimental and control baboon groups indicating the number of infused islets and their treatment
| Group | Baboon identifier | Probe treatment | Number of transplanted islets (IEQ/kg body weight) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experimental | 16P22 | MN-siCas-3 | 7,600 |
| Experimental | 1315 | MN-siCas-3 | 7,411 |
| Experimental | 15P38 | MN-siCas-3 | 8,750 |
| Experimental | 8914 | MN-siCas-3 | 6,650 |
| Control | 4515 | MN | 7,300 |
| Control | 16P46 | MN | 7,800 |
| Control | 15P59 | NA | 0 |
NA, not applicable.
Figure 2A: Apoptotic DNA Ladder Detection Assay demonstrated smearing and laddering in the positive control (lane 1) and the control (nonincubated) islets (lane 2), indicative of fragmentation of DNA caused by apoptosis. In contrast, islets incubated with MN-siCas-3 probe (lane 3) were devoid of these features, suggesting a protective effect of the probe. B: Fluorescence microscopy of baboon islets after incubation with MN-si-Cas-3 for 48 h (Cy5.5, insulin, DAPI cell nuclei). Colocalization of a Cy5.5 signal with anti-insulin staining provided direct evidence of the accumulation of nanoparticles in islet cells (magnification bar = 50 μm).
Figure 3In vivo MRI of transplanted pancreatic islets labeled with MN-siCas-3 (A) or MN (B) probes. Islets appear as dark voids of signal intensity (arrows) on T2-weighted images.
Figure 4Daily blood glucose (BG) values and insulin units as a function of time for experimental animals show a significant decrease in insulin requirements. A–D: Data for individual animals are shown. Creatine levels are shown in Supplementary Fig. 5.
Figure 5Daily blood glucose (BG) values and insulin units as a function of time for control animals show significantly higher insulin requirements compared with experimental animals. A and B: Data for individual animals are shown. Creatine levels are shown in Supplementary Fig. 5.
Figure 6Histological evaluation. Insulin staining at necropsy showed significantly larger and more frequent islet clusters in the livers of experimental animals (A) compared with small, dense, and scattered islets found in control animals (B). Livers from the animals in the experimental group had no remarkable morphological findings (C), while livers from the control animals showed swelling and vacuolar degeneration of hepatic cells in the pericentral zone of the hepatic lobes (D). Scale bars = 200 μm (A and B) and 50 μm (C and D).