PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Pancreatic ductal cells may have a negative effect on human islet transplantation.

  • Sandra Marín-Cañas,
  • Elisabet Estil Les,
  • Laura Llado,
  • Patricia San José,
  • Montserrat Nacher,
  • Noèlia Téllez,
  • Eduard Montanya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220064
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. e0220064

Abstract

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AimTo evaluate the effect of pancreatic ductal cells on experimental human islet transplantation.Materials and methodsIsolated islets were additionally purified by handpicking. Ductal cells were purified by magnetic cell sorting and then clustered into ductal pancreatospheres (DPS). Islets, DPS, and islets + DPS (100 islets + 75 DPS, or 100 islets + 200 DPS) were cultured and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, β-cell apoptosis, and gene expression was determined. Islets and islets + DPS preparations (800 islets + 600 DPS) were transplanted to streptozotocin-treated immunodeficient mice and glycemia, graft morphometry, and gene expression were determined.ResultsInsulin stimulation index was higher in islets than in islets co-cultured with DPS (5.59 ± 0.93 vs 4.02 ± 0.46; p0.05), and the ratio β-/endocrine non-β-cell mass was lower in islets + DPS grafts (islets: 2.05 ± 0.18, islets + DPS: 1.35 ± 0.15; pConclusionsIslet preparations enriched with ductal cells have a lower insulin stimulation index in vitro and achieved a worse metabolic outcome after transplantation. Inflammation may mediate the deleterious effects of ductal cells on islet cells.