| Literature DB >> 34447351 |
Jordan Mattke1, Srividya Vasu2, Carly M Darden1, Kenjiro Kumano2, Michael C Lawrence2, Bashoo Naziruddin3.
Abstract
Exosomes are known for their ability to transport nucleic acid, lipid, and protein molecules, which allows for communication between cells and tissues. The cargo of the exosomes can have a variety of effects on a wide range of targets to mediate biological function. Pancreatic islet transplantation is a minimally invasive cell replacement therapy to prevent or reverse diabetes mellitus and is currently performed in patients with uncontrolled type 1 diabetes or chronic pancreatitis. Exosomes have become a focus in the field of islet transplantation for the study of diagnostic markers of islet cell viability and function. A growing list of miRNAs identified from exosomes collected during the process of isolating islets can be used as diagnostic biomarkers of islet stress and damage, leading to a better understanding of critical steps of the isolation procedure that can be improved to increase islet yield and quality. Exosomes have also been implicated as a possible contributor to islet graft rejection following transplantation, as they carry donor major histocompatibility complex molecules, which are then processed by recipient antigen-presenting cells and sensed by the recipient immune cells. Exosomes may find their way into the therapeutic realm of islet transplantation, as exosomes isolated from mesenchymal stem cells have shown promising results in early studies that have seen increased viability and functionality of isolated and grafted islets in vitro as well as in vivo. With the study of exosomes still in its infancy, continued research on the role of exosomes in islet transplantation will be paramount to understanding beta cell regeneration and improving long-term graft function.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; cytokines; diabetes mellitus; exosome; islet stress; islet transplantation; miRNA; nucleic acids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34447351 PMCID: PMC8382876 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.681600
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Release of exosomes and their cargo from human pancreatic islets during clinical islet transplantation.
Figure 2Release of exosomal microRNAs from human islets subjected to proinflammatory cytokines and hypoxic conditions (A) in vitro and (B) following intraportal transplantation of autologous islets in vivo. Source: Saravanan et al., Diabetologia, 2019 (36). CC indicates proinflammatory cytokines; Hyp, hypoxia.
Exosomal cargo in human islet transplantation.
| Exosome content | Exosome source | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| hsa-miR-375 | Culture supernatant | “Damage-induced exo-miRNA” increased in response to hypoxia, streptozotocin, and cytokine stress after 24 h | ( |
| Xenotransplant mouse serum | Elevated 24 h following transplant | ||
| TPIAT supernatant/human Serum | Elevated throughout islet isolation | ||
| hsa-miR-216a-5p | Culture supernatant | “Stress-induced exo-miRNA” increased after 6 h ctyokine and hypoxic stress | |
| Xenotransplant mouse serum | Elevated 24 h following transplant | ||
| TPIAT supernatant/human serum | Elevated throughout islet isolation | ||
| hsa-miR-148a-3p | Culture supernatant | “Damage-induced exo-miRNA” increased after 24 h cytokine and hypoxic stress | |
| Xenotransplant mouse serum | Elevated 24 h following transplant | ||
| TPIAT supernatant/human serum | Elevated throughout islet isolation | ||
| hsa-miR-29b-3p | Culture supernatant | “Stress-induced exo-miRNA” increased after 6 h ctyokine and hypoxic stress | |
| Xenotransplant mouse serum | Elevated 24 h following transplant | ||
| TPIAT supernatant/human serum | Elevated throughout islet isolation | ||
| hsa-miR-200c-3p | TPIAT supernatant/human serum | Elevated throughout islet isolation | |
| hsa-miR-3613-5p | Xenotransplant mouse serum | Increased in normoglycemic xenotransplant mice | ( |
| Angiopoietin-1 | Xenotransplant mouse serum | Increase associated with normoglycemia following xenotransplant | |
| HSC70 | Xenotransplant mouse serum | Increase associated with normoglycemia following xenotransplant | |
| Complement C3 | Xenotransplant mouse serum | Increase associated with rejection following xenotransplant | |
| Hemopexin | Xenotransplant mouse serum | Increase associated with rejection following xenotransplant |
TPIAT indicates total pancreatectomy with islet autotransplantation.