| Literature DB >> 33428803 |
Salamah M Alwahsh1,2, Omar Qutachi3, Philip J Starkey Lewis1, Andrew Bond4, June Noble4, Paul Burgoyne4, Nik Morton4, Rod Carter4, Janet Mann1, Sofia Ferreira-Gonzalez1, Marta Alvarez-Paino3, Stuart J Forbes1, Kevin M Shakesheff3, Shareen Forbes4.
Abstract
Transplantation of islets in type 1 diabetes (T1D) is limited by poor islet engraftment into the liver, with two to three donor pancreases required per recipient. We aimed to condition the liver to enhance islet engraftment to improve long-term graft function. Diabetic mice received a non-curative islet transplant (n = 400 islets) via the hepatic portal vein (HPV) with fibroblast growth factor 7-loaded galactosylated poly(DL-lactide-co-glycolic acid) (FGF7-GAL-PLGA) particles; 26-µm diameter particles specifically targeted the liver, promoting hepatocyte proliferation in short-term experiments: in mice receiving 0.1-mg FGF7-GAL-PLGA particles (60-ng FGF7) vs vehicle, cell proliferation was induced specifically in the liver with greater efficacy and specificity than subcutaneous FGF7 (1.25 mg/kg ×2 doses; ~75-µg FGF7). Numbers of engrafted islets and vascularization were greater in liver sections of mice receiving islets and FGF7-GAL-PLGA particles vs mice receiving islets alone, 72 h posttransplant. More mice (six of eight) that received islets and FGF7-GAL-PLGA particles normalized blood glucose concentrations by 30-days posttransplant, versus zero of eight mice receiving islets alone with no evidence of increased proliferation of cells within the liver at this stage and normal liver function tests. This work shows that liver-targeted FGF7-GAL-PLGA particles achieve selective FGF7 delivery to the liver-promoting islet engraftment to help normalize blood glucose levels with a good safety profile.Entities:
Keywords: animal models: murine; diabetes: type 1; islet transplantation; regenerative medicine; translational research/science
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33428803 PMCID: PMC8603932 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 9.369