| Literature DB >> 34589059 |
Fritz Cayabyab1, Lina R Nih1,2, Eiji Yoshihara1,2.
Abstract
Diabetes is a complex disease that affects over 400 million people worldwide. The life-long insulin injections and continuous blood glucose monitoring required in type 1 diabetes (T1D) represent a tremendous clinical and economic burdens that urges the need for a medical solution. Pancreatic islet transplantation holds great promise in the treatment of T1D; however, the difficulty in regulating post-transplantation immune reactions to avoid both allogenic and autoimmune graft rejection represent a bottleneck in the field of islet transplantation. Cell replacement strategies have been performed in hepatic, intramuscular, omentum, and subcutaneous sites, and have been performed in both animal models and human patients. However more optimal transplantation sites and methods of improving islet graft survival are needed to successfully translate these studies to a clinical relevant therapy. In this review, we summarize the current progress in the field as well as methods and sites of islet transplantation, including stem cell-derived functional human islets. We also discuss the contribution of immune cells, vessel formation, extracellular matrix, and nutritional supply on islet graft survival. Developing new transplantation sites with emerging technologies to improve islet graft survival and simplify immune regulation will greatly benefit the future success of islet cell therapy in the treatment of diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; diabetes; islet transplantation; stem cells; vascularization
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34589059 PMCID: PMC8473744 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.732431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Islet transplantation sites that have been tested in mouse models and higher mammalian models. The three major factors contribute to success of islet transplantation are the 1. Presence of vascularization and innervation, 2. Immune-modulating factors which affect innate inflammatory response and graft rejection, 3. Accessibility for surgical procedure and absence of major surgical complications. Each transplantation site shows advantages and disadvantages which have been explored. While intra-hepatic infusion is the only clinically applied site for islet transplantation, there are extra-hepatic candidate sites that may superior islet transplantation site. The anterior chamber of the eye is highly vascularized innervated and immune-privileged in most conditions low and atypical expression of MHC class I and II, as well as presence of anti-inflammatory and immune-modulating factors in the intra-ocular fluid is beneficial for islet engraftment. Subcutaneous space is not immune-privileged and poorly vascularized but ease of access and simplicity of surgical procedure and complications makes it an attractive site for islet transplantation. Liver via hepatic portal infusion is the only clinically approved site of transplantation due to success of Edmonton protocol, but extensive loss of islet necessitates for multiple islet donors. Hepatic micro-environment is considered a factor in long-term decline of viability of transplanted islets. Spleen is highly vascularized and drains into the hepatic portal vein and may contain immune-modulating Tregs. Omentum or epididymal fat (murine equivalent) is highly vascularized, and potentially-immune privileged. It can accommodate large islet volume, including a different immuno-modulating co-transplanted cells and biomaterials and devices. Kidney capsule is routinely used as site for islet transplantation in murine subjects, but clinical translation to humans is limited due to common diabetes-related renal complications. Bone marrow is highly vascularized but requires pre-conditioning before it can be considered for islet transplantation.
Summary of Transplantation Sites, Biomaterials and Resident immune cells.
| Alternative Site | Islet Used | Recipient Species | Number of Islets per recipient | Description | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior Chamber of the Eye (ACE) | Islets from PdxCreER-GCAMP in C57BL/6N background | C57BL/6N albino mice | ~300 IEQ | Development of a non-invasive | Normoglycemia observed at ~2 weeks after transplantation, monitored for approximately over 200 days | ( |
| Islets from C57BL/6 and 129X1 mice | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 mice and Nude-Foxn1nu (nude) mice | ~300 IEQ | Study determining the involvement of cholinergic innervation in insulin secretion function of islets | Not available: metabolic effect on daily blood glucose change was not investigated | ( | |
| Islets from C57BL/6J and Tie2-GFP mice | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic athymic male nude mice (B6;Cg/JBomtac-Foxn1nuN3) | ~150-200 IEQ | Determination of the contribution of donor endothelial cells present from isolated islet in revascularization process | Normoglycemia reached in Median of 12.5 days (fresh islets) or median of 7 days (after 4-day cultured) | ( | |
| Islets from C57BL/6 mice and NOD mice | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 mice; NOD-SCID mice given diabetogenic splenocytes | ~25-125 IEQ | Evaluation and real-time visualization of how autoimmunity can occur during T1D | Normoglycemia reached in approximately 12 days, and observed until 47 days | ( | |
| Mouse pseudo-islets from Ins1(Cre) knock-in in C57BL/6J background | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57NL/6J mice | ~100 pseudo-islet approximately | Proof of concept study of increasing transfection efficiency in beta islet by de-aggregating beta islets and then transfecting with adeno-virus before allowing to re-aggregate into pseudo-islet before transplantation in anterior chamber of the eye | Normoglycemia was achieved within two weeks in unreported percentage of mice, and maintained for approximately 40 days | ( | |
| Mouse islets from 2 month-old and 18 month-old C57BL/6 male mice; human islets from non-diabetic donors | Streptozotocin-induced C57BL/6 mice | ~200 IEQ | A study investigating the effect of age-dependent impairment in islet function and vascularization. | Approximately 50% of diabetic recipient achieved normoglycemia within 50 days after transplantation, with majority maintaining glycemic control for up to 11 months | ( | |
| Allogeneic islets from baboon model of diabetes | Allogeneic transplantation into a Streptozotocin-induced diabetic baboon | ~18,000 to 20,000 IEQ (approximately 2100 IEQ/Kg) | Study evaluating feasibility of ACE as islet transplantation site in pre-clinical model of streptozotocin-induced diabetes | Exogenous insulin requirement decreased after 3 months, monitored until 357days | ( | |
| Allogeneic islets from a healthy cynomolgus monkey | Allogeneic transplantation into the T2D cynomolgus monkey | ~12,000 IEQ (1500 IEQ/Kg) | Evaluation of ACE as transplantation site for islet pre-clinical model of high-fat diet induced diabetes | Normoglycemia post-transplantation (88measurements); Observed for 348 days post-transplantation (POD 97-POD185; iridectomy POD186-POD348) | ( | |
| Bone Marrow | Syngeneic islets from C57BL/6 mice | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 mice | ~125-500 IEQ | Proof of concept study of transplanting islet into an easily accessible bone marrow | 52% of mice transplanted with 125 IEQ achieved normoglycemia within 85 days (median), and 76% of mice transplanted with 250 IE achieved normoglycemia within 14 days (median) | ( |
| Autologous Islet transplantation in humans | Four patients with contraindication for intraportal islet infusion | ~32,000 to 334,600 total IEQ per patient (666-4,780 IEQ) | Pilot clinical study of testing feasibility and safety of autologous human islet transplantation into the patients’ own bone marrow | ( | ||
| Allogeneic human islet | Patients with T1D and contraindication for intraportal islet infusion, and T1D patients in randomized trial | ~287,000 to 1,125,116 total IEQ (2,727 – 10,684 IEQ/Kg) | Feasibility study and pilot randomized trial of patients with T1D to study safety and outcome of allogeneic islet transplantation into the bone marrow | ( | ||
| Islets from C57BL/6 or BALB/c mice6 | Alloxan-induced diabetic C57BL6 mice | 450 IEQ | Study that evaluated bone-marrow precondition | Normoglycemia reached within 1 week post-transplantation and monitored for up to 6 weeks post-transplantation | ( | |
| Subcutaneous | Landrace pig islets with pig bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMMSC), pig adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (AMSC) | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic Wistar rats and cynomolgus monkeys | 125-300 IEQ/g for Wistar rat recipients, 15,000 to 62,500 IEQ/Kg for primate recipients | Porcine islets and mesenchymal stem cells from bone marrow and adipose tissue, co-encapsulated in P.E. alginate coated, collagen matrix device were transplanted subcutaneously in Wistar rats and cynomolgus monkeys to determine if this system could improve vascularization, implant oxygenation, and metabolic control in short term and long term. | For islets alone, mean weeks of normoglycemia is 28 weeks, while Islets with adipose-derived MSC and bone marrow-derived MSC have 23 weeks and 30 weeks, respectively. Co-encapsulation of MSC did not improve long-term viability | ( |
| Syngeneic islets from C57BL/6 mice, or BALB/c mice, or human islets | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 mice, and Rag-/- mice | ~500 IEQ (syngeneic transplant), ~2000 human islet IEQ in immunodeficient mice | The subcutaneous space was pre-treated with medically-approved nylon or silicone catheter for one month before being removed (device-less). One month implantation was enough to induce a subcutaneous space with local neovascularization without formation of thick, mature fibrotic scar, before being transplantation with islet | 91% of diabetic mice reversed diabetes by day 60 and maintained normoglycemia for more than 100 days | ( | |
| Human embryonic stem cell-derived pancreatic endoderm | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic, immunodeficient B6/Rag-/- mice | 0.5-1.0 x 107 cells | Use of similar ‘device-less” technique of implanting nylon catheter in subcutaneous space for month before removal. Subsequent implantation of human embryonic stem cell-derived pancreatic endoderm for | Of the mice that were transplanted at epididymal fat and un-treated subcutaneous space, only 33% achieved normoglycemia. For mice that were transplanted in ‘device-less’ subcutaneous space, 100% achieved normoglycemia for an average of 99.8 ± 3.8 days | ( | |
| Wistar rat islets | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic SCID/beige mice and immune-suppressed Sprague-Dawley Rats | ~750 IEQ | Islets were embedded in submillimeter collagen cylinders, coated with endothelial cells before being transplanted subcutaneously. | five out of six diabetic rats have restored normoglycemia within 10 days for 21 days | ( | |
| C57BL/6 syngeneic islets, and human islets | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 and NOD/SCID mice | ~100-400 mouse IEQ and ~2000 to 2500 human IEQ | Transplantation into a specific subcutaneous space in the inguinal subcutaneous white adipose tissue allowed for neovascularization and connection with feeding vessels from the inferior epigastric artery and vein. | Six out of eight diabetic mice receiving both CTLA4 Ig and anti-CD40L antibody regained normoglycemia within approximately 60 days, compared to one out of five/six of mice receiving either anti-CD40L or CTLA4Ig only. Normoglycemia was maintained for a duration of approximately 120 days after which the graft was removed | ( | |
| F344 rat islet, Porcine islets | SCID mice, total-pancreatectomized pig as model for T1D | 1,000-2,000 rat islets; approximately 7,007 to 10,005 IEQ/Kg of porcine islets was used for porcine recipients | Adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cell sheet seeded with islet was transplanted subcutaneously in SCID mice and total-pancreatectomized pigs | 100% of SCID mice transplanted with four islet-MSC sheet achieved normoglycemia within 1 week, and maintained normoglycemia for 84 days; normoglycemia was achieved in one week, and maintained until second week during which graftectomy was performed | ( | |
| Sprague-Dawley rat islets | diabetic athymic BALB/c-nude mice | ~4,000 rat IEQ and ~8,000 human IEQ | Esterified collagen scaffold functionalized with heparin contained varying number human adipose-derived stem cells and islets, transplanted subcutaneously | Higher number of human adipose-derived stem cells resulted in normoglycemia within 1 day post-transplantation, and maintained for up to 100 days | ( | |
| Murine, porcine and human islets and cynomolgus islets (auto-transplantation) | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic immune-incompetent B6/SCID and Balb/c/nude mice and immune-competent wild-type B6 mice (with immune-suppressive regimen), as well as 90%-pancreatectomized cynomolgus monkey | ~400-800 murine IEQ; 250-500 porcine IEQ; 400 human IEQ | Pancreatic islets were transplanted subcutaneously with a viability matrix containing collagen, L-glutamine, FBS, and sodium bicarbonate and media that affected long-term functionality of engrafted islets | Normoglycemia was achieved within 24 hours post-transplantation with graft survival and maintained for up to 127 days (immune-incompetent mice) and up to 529 days (wild-type mice under immune-suppressive regimen); T1D cynomolgus monkey (auto-transplantation) maintained normoglycemia until 820 days post-transplantation. | ( | |
| Pseudo-islets from de-aggregated rat or human islets cells | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic SCID/bg mice | 1.5 x 106 islet cells (dose equivalent of approximately 750 IEQ) | Collagen gel scaffold embedded with pseudo-islets with modifiable proportion of the different cell types of the pancreatic islet for uniform pseudo-islet size, cell composition and proportion | Six out of nine SCID/B6 mice transplanted with pseudo-islets and adMSC returned to normoglycemia in approximately 10 days until day 21, during which graftectomy was performed | ( | |
| C57BL/6 and BALB/c mouse islets, Sprague-Dawley rat islets, human islets, HUES8 stem-cell derived β cell clusters. | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic male C57BL/6, male SCID-beige mice, and male NOD/NSG mice and healthy beagle dogs | ~600-700 IEQ ~1700 human islet clusters, ~2500 HUES8 stem-cell derived β cell clusters | Use of medical-grade, silicone-polycarbonate-urethane biomaterial encapsulating an alginate core containing either syngeneic, allogeneic, or xenogeneic rodent islets, or human islets or HUES8 stem-cell derived β cell clusters to assess foreign body reaction, immune-protective function, and normoglycemia function | Syngeneic mouse model achieved normoglycemia within one week for 120 days (13 out of 17 mice), while normoglycemia was achieved within one week for up to 100 days in immune-deficient mouse model (8 out of 11 mice). In immune-competent mice, normoglycemia was achieved within a week for up to 8 weeks (10 out of 16 mice) | ( | |
| Sprague-Dawley male rats | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic male C57BL/6 mice and female Gö;ttingen minipigs | 500 rat IEQ; 1500 rat IEQ | Proof of concept study using an inverse breathing encapsulation device (iBED) that supplies oxygen to transplanted islet | Improved iBED version resulted to eight out of ten C57BL/6 mice achieving normoglycemia for approximately 92 days, with better glucose metabolism even after 90 days. Non-fasting blood glucose level was not reported in minipigs, but retrieved device exhibited more surviving islets than controls after 1 and 2 months of implantation | ( | |
| Omentum | Syngeneic C57BL/6J female mouse islets | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/J6 male mice and streptozotocin-induced NOD-SCID male mice | ~600 mouse IEQ | Study comparing three leading extra-hepatic islet transplantation site (subcutaneous, small bowel mesentery, epididymal fat pad) for synthetic vasculogenic hydrogel-based islet transplantation | The islets with the vasculogenic hydrogel transplanted into the epididymal fat pad achieved normoglycemia within two weeks, for more than 35 days up to 100 days (approximately 75% of recipients) | ( |
| Lewis male rat islet | Lewis female rats | ~10,000 IEQ/Kg | Non-biodegradable knitted polymer mesh inserted into the omentum with subcutaneous access for 4 weeks before islets are introduced. Insulin pellets were also introduced into the Lewis rat recipients | All ten rat islet recipients achieved blood glucose of 8mmol/L as a result of combined insulin pellet and transplanted islet, and maintained for up to 100 days | ( | |
| Wistar Furth male rat islets, Cynomolgus monkeys | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic female Lewis rats, Streptozotocin-induced diabetic cynomolgus monkeys | 17,338 ± 881 IEQ/Kg for syngeneic rat model; ~3000 IEQ of allogeneic rat model; Cynomolgus monkey islet of approximately 48,700 IEQ (9347 cynomolgus monkey IEQ/Kg) | Islet transplantation into the omentum utilizing a biological, resorbable plasma-thrombin scaffold to monitor metabolic improvement in diabetic rats, as well as cytoarchitecture of transplanted islets | Seven out of seven syngeneis rats achieved normoglycemia within 2 days and maintained normoglycemia for more than 200 days. Four out of four immune-suppressed allogeneic rats achieved normoglycemia five days post-transplantation, and maintained for more than five weeks. | ( | |
| Cynomolgus monkey islets | Non-diabetic cynomolgus monkeys; Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 mice | Approximately 1500 cynomolgus monkey islet in intraperitoneal space of diabetic C57BL/6 mice; approximately 5000 cynomolgus monkey islets were seeded in 5mL of alginate formulation at seeding density of 1000 islets per mL of alginate formulation | Study investigating foreign body response to different immune-modulating formulation of alginate in islet encapsulation method, as tested and transplanted in non-diabetic non-human primates. Islet viability is measured after 1 month and 4 months of transplantation into the omental bursa. | Alginate formulation SLG20 allowed for normoglycemia in diabetic C57BL/6 mice for approximately 120 days without the need for immunosuppressant. Marginal fibrosis was observed after 1 month of transplantation in these C57BL/6 mice. The same results were not recapitulated when the same formulation was tested in cynomolgus monkeys; Instead, a different alginate formulation, Z1-Y15, showed reduced foreign body response in the form of fibrosis when tested in non-human primates. Six out of seven encapsulated islets showed higher viability after retrieval from transplantation. Blood glucose control was not investigated in these non-human primates. | ( | |
| Spleen | Islets from Pancreatectomized Mongrel dogs | Autotransplantation Pancreatectomized non-diabetic Mongrel dogs | Approximately 9000-13,000 IEQ per recipient | Comparative study of omental pouch | Time to normoglycemia was not indicated but beta islet response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia was deemed normal while alpha cell response was not. The response in omentum and splenic transplantation were similar | ( |
| Syngenetic islets from C57BL/6 | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 mice (Syngeneic) | Approximately 50-200 IEQ per recipient | Comparative study of hepatic portal vein, kidney capsule and spleen as islet transplantation site | Spleen has the lowest number of islets required to achieve normoglycemia, compared to portal vein or kidney with reduced inflammation and potential expansion of islet graft. | ( | |
| Porcine Islets from fetal pigs | Adult pancreatectomized Westran pigs | Approximately more than 5000 IEQ per recipient | Comparative study of kidney capsule, hepatic portal vein and spleen as islet transplantation site | Normoglycemia was achieved by day 120 post-transplantation. Glucose metabolism is better in kidney than liver and spleen. | ( | |
| Human islets or C57BL/6 murine islets | Alloxan-induced diabetic C57BL6 mice (syngeneic) or RAG-1 or SCID immunodeficient mice (recipient for human islets) | Approximately 2000 IEQ per recipient | Comparative study of Portal vein, Quadricep muscles, kidney capsule, liver capsule, and splenic capsule as islet transplantation site | Spleen and liver capsule were inferior compared to other transplantation site. Skeletal muscle and portal vein should similar engraftment efficiency while kidney capsule performed yielded the best outcome at 75% and 100% success rate for human and murine islet transplantation | ( | |
| Syngeneic islets from C57BL/6 mice | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 mice (syngeneic) | Approximately 300 IEQ per recipient | Comparative study of hepatic sinus tract | Spleen performed better than hepatic sinus tract as islet transplantation site in term of glucose metabolism. Normoglycemia was observed by day 10 post-transplantation for both sites | ( | |
| Intramuscular | Porcine islets from Lardrace large white pigs | Pancreatectomized baboons (Papio anubis) | Approximately 10,000 IEQ/Kg per recipient | Comparative study of the different immunosuppressive regimen for islet survival in both intraportal vein and muscle (sternomastoid muscle) transplantation site for non-human primates | Normoglycemia was achieved within 24 hours post-transplantation, and the different immunosuppressive regimens allowed for porcine islets to survive beyond 14 days in non-human primate recipients. | ( |
| Human islet | 7-year old patient (auto-transplantation) | Approximately 163,000 IEQ (6400 IEQ/Kg) | Clinical study for auto-transplantation of islets into the brachioradialis forearm muscle for a patient with contraindication for intraportal islet transplantation | Observational period lasted for two years, and the patient achieved better quality of life but insulin-independence was not achieved | ( | |
| Syngeneic islets from male Lewis rats | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic Lewis Rats (syngeneic) | Approximately 2400 IEQ per recipient | Diabetic rats were pre-treated intramuscularly with biocompatible angiogenic scaffold before islets are transplanted into the abdominal muscle | Islet engraftment was better in bio-compatible scaffold pre-treated rats, with 2-4 times increase in vascularization after 60 days of observation. Normoglycemia was achieved in this cohort I less than 10 days and maintained for up to 60 days | ( | |
| Syngeneic islets from Lewis rats | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic Lewis rats (syngeneic) | Approximately 1500-2000 IEQ per recipient | A study developing a reproducible technique for islet transplantation into the bicep femoris of rat models of islet transplantation | Normoglycemia was achieved in less than 20 days and maintained for more than 100 days. It was determined that there is volume-dependent increase in muscle inflammatory response and peri-islet fibrosis. Pearl-on-string transplantation technique allowed for better islet engraftment into the muscle | ( | |
| Syngeneic islets from C57BL/6 mice | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic C57BL/6 mice | 100-600 IEQ per recipient | Comparative study of different islet transplantation sites, determining marginal mass required and mean time to achieve normoglycemia in murine models of islet transplantation | Kidney required the least number of islets required to achieve normoglycemia followed by omentum and last, liver and muscle. Transplantation in muscle took the longest to achieve normoglycemia compared to other transplantation sites | ( | |
| Islets from minipigs | Pancreatectomized minipigs (Non-syngeneic) | Approximately 1000 IEQ/Kg per recipient | Transplantation study into the gracilius muscle in minipig models to determine the best surgical technique to allow for islet engraftment into the muscles | Despite minimizing damage to the muscle during transplantation procedure to minimize immune response, islets transplanted into the muscle did not perform better than islets transplanted into the hepatic portal vein. | ( | |
| Neonatal Porcine Islets from 2-5 day old hybrid German landrace piglets | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic NOD-SCID IL2rγ-/- (NSG) mice | Approximately 2500-3000 neonatal porcine islet-like clusters | Comparison of kidney capsule | Neonatal porcine islet-like clusters needed an | ( | |
| Islets from Balb/c mice | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic Balb/c mice | Approximately 100-500 IEQ | Comparative study to determine the effects of transplanting islet with Matrigel on engraftment efficiency in femoral muscles | Islet imbedding into Matrigel improved engraftment efficiency into the muscle. The difference in the amount of growth factor present in the Matrigel allowed for difference in engraftment efficiency after day 7 post-transplantation. The proportion of mice achieving normoglycemia following intramuscular transplantation with islets and Matrigel was equal to or greater than mice receiving intraportal transplanted islets | ( | |
| Islets from C57BL/6 mice | Alloxan-induced diabetic C57BL/6 nu/nu mice | Approximately 200 IEQ | Study utilizing co-transplantation of islets and polymerized bovine hemoglobulin into abdominal muscle of murine models of transplantation | The polymerized bovine hemoglobulin acts as oxygen carrier that reduced hypoxia in transplanted islet resulting in better engraftment into the muscle | ( | |
| Human islets from cadaveric donors | Four patients (allo-transplantation) | Approximately 240-471 IEQ/kg per recipient | Clinical study determining vascularization and function of islets transplanted into the brachioradialis forearm muscle in patients (allo-transplantation) | In three out of four patients, there was a rapid and progressive disappearance of function of the transplanted islets, possibly due to low IEQ transplanted | ( | |
| Islets from Lewis rats | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic Lewis rate | Approximately 3000 IEQ | Study determining the suitability of denervated gastrocnemius muscle flap as an islet transplantation site | Because muscle contraction can limit blood flow into intramuscularly transplanted islet, denervation of muscle prior to islet transplantation can improve islet functionality. Blood glucose levels were lower in denervated muscle flap group compared to non-denervated muscle group. | ( |
Figure 2Major immune components in each site affecting success of transplantation. Each islet transplantation sites have different microenvironment, which include immune system components that either increase or decrease of islet engraftment. Some of these sites, such as the omentum, spleen and anterior chamber of the eye, are considered immune-privileged. The presence of anti-inflammatory factors and regulatory T-cells that suppress expansion of effector T-cells and decreasing the effects of proinflammatory cytokines are key immune modulators in immune privilege sites. Other sites, such as the subcutaneous space and the bone marrow sites contain T cells and NK cells, among other immune cells that contribute to graft rejection and long-term viability of transplanted islets. Strategies must be incorporated in these sites to not only increase angiogenesis but also modulate immune responses to prevent graft rejection. The potential anti-inflammatory components in each site are described by blue color and the potential inflammatory components in each site are described by red color.