Combination Therapy with Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 and Gastrin Induces β-Cell Neogenesis from Pancreatic Duct Cells in Human Islets Transplanted in Immunodeficient Diabetic Mice

Author:

Suarez-Pinzon Wilma L.1,Lakey Jonathan R. T.2,Rabinovitch Alex1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2S2, Canada

2. Clinical Islet Transplantation Group Inc., Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2C8, Canada

Abstract

Pancreatic islet transplantation as a treatment for type 1 diabetes is limited by human donor tissue availability. We investigated whether the β-cell mass in human isolated islets could be expanded by treatments with glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and gastrin, peptides reported to stimulate β-cell growth in mice and rats with deficits in β-cell mass. Human islets with low endocrine cell purity (7% β-cells, 4% α-cells) and abundant exocrine cells (29% duct cells and 25% acinar cells) were implanted under the renal capsule of nonobese diabetic-severe combined immune deficiency (NOD-scid) mice made diabetic with streptozotocin. The mice were treated with GLP-1 and gastrin, separately and together, daily for 5 weeks. Blood glucose was significantly reduced only in mice implanted with human pancreatic cells and treated with GLP-1 plus gastrin. Correction of hyperglycemia was accompanied by increased insulin content in the human pancreatic cell grafts as well as by increased plasma levels of human C-peptide in the mice. Immunocytochemical examination revealed a fourfold increase in insulin-positive cells in the human pancreatic cell grafts in GLP-1 plus gastrin-treated mice, and most of this increase was accounted for by the appearance of cytokeratin 19-positive pancreatic duct cells expressing insulin. We conclude that combination therapy with GLP-1 and gastrin expands the β-cell mass in human islets implanted in immunodeficient diabetic mice, largely from pancreatic duct cells associated with the islets, and this is sufficient to ameliorate hyperglycemia in the mice.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Transplantation,Cell Biology,Biomedical Engineering

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