In vivo depletion of pancreatic acinar tissue simplifies islet preparation for transplantation.

Autor: Al-Abdullah IH; Department of Surgery, Hahnemann School of Medicine, Allegheny University of Health Sciences, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102, USA., Vulin CL, Kumar MS
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Transplantation [Transplantation] 1996 Sep 27; Vol. 62 (6), pp. 781-7.
DOI: 10.1097/00007890-199609270-00015
Abstrakt: A copper deficient diet is reported to reduce acinar tissue in vivo. We investigated the suitability of this method to reduce in vivo acinar tissue mass of a rat pancreas prior to transplantation of dispersed pancreatic tissue. We also studied islet function in the acinar depleted pancreas and the outcome of transplantation of islets from such pancreata. Eighty-two Wistar Furth rats were divided into two groups with 42 animals in the control group receiving regular diet, and 40 receiving copper deficient diets (Cudt) plus tetraethylene- pentamine penta-hydrochloride (TEPA) as a chelating agent. All animals in the control group and 34 (85%) in the Cudt group tolerated this diet and survived for 60 days or longer. At the end of 60 days, all experimental animals were converted to a regular diet until the pancreata were harvested for islet transplantation. Eight rats in the Cudt group, which were converted to a regular diet for 2 weeks, and 2 in the control group were randomly selected and sacrificed to study the pancreas for acinar depletion and islet morphology. An intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) in the control group (n=24) and the Cudt group (n=25) showed K-values of 1.891+/-0.7 and 1.107+/-0.47, respectively (P-ns). Histology of pancreata showed normal acinar tissue in the control group and reduction of acinar tissue mass in the Cudt group. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry for insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin showed positively staining, while amylase was negative in the Cudt group, compared with the positive stain for cells in the control group. Standard collagenase digestion of the pancreas showed islets were surrounded by scant amounts of acinar tissue in the Cudt group compared with the control group. The islet count in the control group was 523+/-126 and 611+/-52 in the Cudt group. The mean volumes of dispersed pancreatic tissue were 0.3875+/-0.14 and 0.0668+/-0.029 ml per rat in the control and Cudt groups, respectively (P<0.05). Transplantation of dispersed pancreatic tissue from the control group into the spleen of two diabetic Wistar Furth rats resulted in the death of the recipients within 24 hr. To avoid this complication, purified islets from the control group were used for transplantation. Purified islets from 5 donor pancreata from the control group and dispersed pancreatic tissue from 3 pancreata in the Cudt group were transplanted into each recipient. Islet function was seen in 75% of the rats transplanted with purified islets from the control group, and in 67% receiving dispersed pancreatic tissue from the Cudt group. Rats with sustained islet function for 30 days following islet transplantation developed diabetes following splenectomy. The islet cells were positively stained for insulin these splenectomy specimens. This study demonstrates that rats maintained on a copper deficient diet for 60 days show depletion of collagenase digested volume of whole pancreatic tissue occurred in the Cudt as compared with the control group. Transplantation of dispersed pancreatic tissue from the acinar depleted pancreas was successful in reversing diabetes. We conclude that Cudt containing TEPA depletes exocrine tissue and facilitates pancreas digestion for successful transplantation of islets into the portal system.
Databáze: MEDLINE