49 research outputs found
膵管内乳頭粘液腫瘍に認められるGNAS遺伝子変異はムチン遺伝子発現変化を始めとした広範な遺伝子発現プロファイルの変化をもたらす
Tohoku University海野倫明課
Oxygen environment and islet size are the primary limiting factors of isolated pancreatic islet survival
Background: Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease that destroys insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. Pancreatic islet transplantation could be an effective treatment option for type 1 diabetes once several issues are resolved, including donor shortage, prevention of islet necrosis and loss in pre- and post-transplantation, and optimization of immunosuppression. This study seeks to determine the cause of necrotic loss of isolated islets to improve transplant efficiency.
Methodology: The oxygen tension inside isolated human islets of different sizes was simulated under varying oxygen environments using a computational in silico model. In vitro human islet viability was also assessed after culturing in different oxygen conditions. Correlation between simulation data and experimentally measured islet viability was examined. Using these in vitro viability data of human islets, the effect of islet diameter and oxygen tension of the culture environment on islet viability was also analyzed using a logistic regression model.
Principal findings: Computational simulation clearly revealed the oxygen gradient inside the islet structure. We found that oxygen tension in the islet core was greatly lower (hypoxic) than that on the islet surface due to the oxygen consumption by the cells. The hypoxic core was expanded in the larger islets or in lower oxygen cultures. These findings were consistent with results from in vitro islet viability assays that measured central necrosis in the islet core, indicating that hypoxia is one of the major causes of central necrosis. The logistic regression analysis revealed a negative effect of large islet and low oxygen culture on islet survival.
Conclusions/Significance: Hypoxic core conditions, induced by the oxygen gradient inside islets, contribute to the development of central necrosis of human isolated islets. Supplying sufficient oxygen during culture could be an effective and reasonable method to maintain isolated islets viable
Oxygen environment and islet size are the primary limiting factors of isolated pancreatic islet survival
Background: Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease that destroys insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. Pancreatic islet transplantation could be an effective treatment option for type 1 diabetes once several issues are resolved, including donor shortage, prevention of islet necrosis and loss in pre- and post-transplantation, and optimization of immunosuppression. This study seeks to determine the cause of necrotic loss of isolated islets to improve transplant efficiency.
Methodology: The oxygen tension inside isolated human islets of different sizes was simulated under varying oxygen environments using a computational in silico model. In vitro human islet viability was also assessed after culturing in different oxygen conditions. Correlation between simulation data and experimentally measured islet viability was examined. Using these in vitro viability data of human islets, the effect of islet diameter and oxygen tension of the culture environment on islet viability was also analyzed using a logistic regression model.
Principal findings: Computational simulation clearly revealed the oxygen gradient inside the islet structure. We found that oxygen tension in the islet core was greatly lower (hypoxic) than that on the islet surface due to the oxygen consumption by the cells. The hypoxic core was expanded in the larger islets or in lower oxygen cultures. These findings were consistent with results from in vitro islet viability assays that measured central necrosis in the islet core, indicating that hypoxia is one of the major causes of central necrosis. The logistic regression analysis revealed a negative effect of large islet and low oxygen culture on islet survival.
Conclusions/Significance: Hypoxic core conditions, induced by the oxygen gradient inside islets, contribute to the development of central necrosis of human isolated islets. Supplying sufficient oxygen during culture could be an effective and reasonable method to maintain isolated islets viable
Isolated human islets require hyperoxia to maintain islet mass, metabolism, and function
Pancreatic islet transplantation has been recognized as an effective treatment for Type 1 diabetes; however, there is still plenty of room to improve transplantation efficiency. Because islets are metabolically active they require high oxygen to survive; thus hypoxia after transplant is one of the major causes of graft failure. Knowing the optimal oxygen tension for isolated islets would allow a transplant team to provide the best oxygen environment during pre- and post-transplant periods. To address this issue and begin to establish empirically determined guidelines for islet maintenance, we exposed in vitro cultured islets to different partial oxygen pressures (pO_2) and assessed changes in islet volume, viability, metabolism, and function. Human islets were cultured for 7 days in different pO_2 media corresponding to hypoxia (90 mmHg), normoxia (160 mmHg), and hyerpoxia (270 or 350 mmHg). Compared to normoxia and hypoxia, hyperoxia alleviated the loss of islet volume, maintaining higher islet viability and metabolism as measured by oxygen consumption and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion responses. We predict that maintaining pre- and post-transplanted islets in a hyperoxic environment will alleviate islet volume loss and maintain islet quality thereby improving transplant outcomes
MEMS Silicon Cutters for Rapid Sectioning of Diffusion-Limited Pancreatic Islets to Improve Viability
This paper reports on the first MEMS silicon cutters designed to rapidly section donor pancreatic islets below oxygen diffusion-limited dimensions to improve viability of grafts during the critical period of re-implantation and revascularization by the host. The monolithic silicon chips feature an array of spaced nano-sharp (r < 100 nm) blades that cleanly section islet tissue. This work represents the first time that sectioning of pancreatic islets has been proposed and validated as a means to overcome the well-known problems of hypoxia and core-necrosis that is encountered in current islet transplantation procedures
MEMS Silicon Cutters for Rapid Sectioning of Diffusion-Limited Pancreatic Islets to Improve Viability
This paper reports on the first MEMS silicon cutters designed to rapidly section donor pancreatic islets below oxygen diffusion-limited dimensions to improve viability of grafts during the critical period of re-implantation and revascularization by the host. The monolithic silicon chips feature an array of spaced nano-sharp (r < 100 nm) blades that cleanly section islet tissue. This work represents the first time that sectioning of pancreatic islets has been proposed and validated as a means to overcome the well-known problems of hypoxia and core-necrosis that is encountered in current islet transplantation procedures
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A novel approach to determine the critical survival threshold of cellular oxygen within spheroids via integrating live/dead cell imaging with oxygen modeling
Hypoxia plays a crucial role in cell physiology. Defining the oxygen level that induces cell death within 3D tissues is vital for understanding tissue hypoxia; however, obtaining accurate measurements has been technically challenging. In this study, we introduce a non-invasive, high-throughput methodology to quantify critical survival partial oxygen pressure (pO₂) with high spatial resolution within spheroids by employing a combination of controlled hypoxic conditions, semi-automated live/dead cell imaging, and computational oxygen modeling. The oxygen-permeable, micro-pyramid patterned culture plates created a precisely controlled oxygen condition around the individual spheroid. Live/dead cell imaging provided the geometric information of the live/dead boundary within spheroids. Finally, computational oxygen modeling calculated the pO₂ at the live/dead boundary within spheroids. As proof of concept, we determined the critical survival pO₂ in two types of spheroids: isolated primary pancreatic islets and tumor-derived pseudo-islets (2.43 ± 0.08 vs. 0.84 ± 0.04 mmHg), indicating higher hypoxia tolerance in pseudo-islets due to their tumorigenic origin. We also applied this method for evaluating graft survival in cell transplantations for diabetes therapy, where hypoxia is a critical barrier to successful transplantation outcomes; thus, designing oxygenation strategies is required. Based on the elucidated critical survival pO₂, 100% viability could be maintained in a typically sized primary islet under the tissue pO₂ above 14.5 mmHg. This work presents a valuable tool that is potentially instrumental for fundamental hypoxia research. It offers insights into physiological responses to hypoxia among different cell types and may refine translational research in cell therapies