Cell Transplantation (Jul 1998)
Improved Large-Scale Isolation of Breeder Porcine Islets: Possibility of Harvesting from Nonheart-Beating Donor
Abstract
To establish a large-scale isolation procedure for adult porcine islets usable as a donor source for xenotransplantation and as a model of human islet isolation, we improved several characteristics of the conventional isolation procedure. At a slaughterhouse we first selected a breeder pig over 1.5 years old (and over 200 kg in weight) with warm ischemic time (WIT) of 15 ± 2 minutes as nonheart-beating donors. Then, we made a special enzymic mixture that consisted of collagenase S-1 (260 U/mg, NittaZelatin, Japan), collagenase P (1.86 U/ml Lyo Boehringer-Mannheim, USA), DNase (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo), Disparse (NittaZelatin, Japan), and protease inhibitor (Sigma). Third, this mixture was injected very gently into the pancreatic duct at the time of pancreatic harvesting. To prevent overdigestion of the pancreas, the mixture was first cooled to less than 10°C. Fourth, during the warm digestion of pancreas, the pancreas with the enzymic mixture was quietly put in a water bath at 37°C without mechanical shaking. Fifth, we purified the islets with a COBE 2991 cell processor by the Dextran 70 gradient method, because Dextran 70 is very cheap and has the same purification effect as the Ficoll gradient. The results of 10 consecutive breeder porcine islet isolations are reported. The total yield of isolations of islets over 50 μm in the longest diameter after staining with Dithizone (DTZ) was 85,900 ± 19,954 islets, 291,667 ± 240,452 IEQ (2,900 ± 2,324 IEQ/g). The purity of the isolated islets was very high: 90.2 ± 3.8%. Glucose stimulation during in vitro incubation induced significant insulin release from isolated breeder porcine islets. In two of the diabetic rats receiving encapsulated islets grafts using a mesh-reinforced polyvinyl alcohol hydrogel bag (MRPB), a prominent reduction in serum glucose levels (less than 200 mg/dL) persisted for 13 and 19 days, respectively, after intraperitoneal xenotransplantation islets without immunosuppression. In conclusion, we succeeded in a more efficient and less-expensive isolation of a large amount of adult porcine islets from a nonheart-beating donor.