Cell Transplantation (Mar 2001)

C-Peptide Determinations in Islet Xenotransplantation: A Study in the Pig-to-Mouse Model

  • L. Wennberg M.D., Ph.D.,
  • B. Sundberg,
  • K. Ekdahl-Nilsson,
  • O. Korsgren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3727/000000001783986918
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Assays of C-peptide are used to monitor allogeneic islet graft function. However, it is not known whether xenogeneic C-peptide is metabolized and excreted in a fashion similar to endogenous and allogeneic C-peptide. In this study, injection of 10 times the physiological amount of porcine C-peptide into mice did not result in the excretion of the C-peptide in the urine. In contrast, when a physiological amount of porcine C-peptide was injected into athymic mice, urinary excretion of porcine C-peptide was readily detected. After injection of radioactively labeled porcine C-peptide into mice, the radioactive uptake in tissues belonging to the mononuclear phagocytic system was significantly increased in mice immunized towards the xenogeneic C-peptide. These results may reflect an immunological reactivity towards the C-peptide. Antibodies against porcine C-peptide could not be detected in the serum of any of the mice. However, porcine C-peptide was found to be glycosylated. Thus, a possible explanation to the lack of porcine C-peptide in the urine is that xenoreactive antibodies had bound to carbohydrate structures on the peptide and that the antibody – C-peptide complex had been cleared from the circulation by the mononuclear phagocytic system. Thus, the urinary excretion of xenogeneic C-peptide seems to be different from that of endogenous and allogeneic C-peptide. Consequently, determinations of donor-specific C-peptide may not properly reflect islet xenograft function. In fact, islet xenograft function may be underestimated.