| Literature DB >> 33026180 |
Aline Zbinden1, Daniel A Carvajal Berrio1,2, Max Urbanczyk1, Shannon L Layland1, Mariella Bosch1, Sandro Fliri1, Chuan-En Lu1, Abiramy Jeyagaran1, Peter Loskill1,3, Garry P Duffy4, Katja Schenke-Layland1,2,5,6.
Abstract
Pancreatic islet isolation from donor pancreases is an essential step for the transplantation of insulin-secreting β-cells as a therapy to treat type 1 diabetes mellitus. This process however damages islet basement membranes, which can lead to islet dysfunction or death. Posttransplantation, islets are further stressed by a hypoxic environment and immune reactions that cause poor engraftment and graft failure. The current standards to assess islet quality before transplantation are destructive procedures, performed on a small islet population that does not reflect the heterogeneity of large isolated islet batches. In this study, we incorporated fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) into a pancreas-on-chip system to establish a protocol to noninvasively assess the viability and functionality of pancreatic β-cells in a three-dimensional in vitro model (= pseudo-islets). We demonstrate how (pre-) hypoxic β-cell-composed pseudo-islets can be discriminated from healthy functional pseudo-islets according to their FLIM-based metabolic profiles. The use of FLIM during the pretransplantation pancreatic islet selection process has the potential to improve the outcome of β-cell islet transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: FLIM; hypoxia; insulin; pancreatic islet; type 1 diabetes
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33026180 DOI: 10.1002/jbio.202000375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biophotonics ISSN: 1864-063X Impact factor: 3.207