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Oxygen Perfusion (Persufflation) of Human Pancreata Enhances Insulin Secretion and Attenuates Islet Proinflammatory Signaling

Authors :
Klearchos K. Papas
Manas Dmd
Amanda M. Cooksey
Hasilo C
Kate E. Smith
Andrew M. Posselt
Georgiev Ig
Nicholas D. Price
Amy C. Kelly
Robert C. Harland
Suszynski Tm
Scott We rd
Peter G. Stock
Leticia E. Camacho
Shaw Jam
Miranda J. Anderson
Shapiro Amj
Weegman Bp
Thomas Loudovaris
Molano Ds
OʼGorman D
Fiona M. McCarthy
Catherine G. Min
Tatsuya Kin
Jana Jandova
Gregory L. Szot
Steven Paraskevas
Theodore Karatzas
Sean W. Limesand
Craig Weber
Ronald M. Lynch
Purvis Wg
Source :
Transplantation, vol 103, iss 1
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background All human islets used in research and for the clinical treatment of diabetes are subject to ischemic damage during pancreas procurement, preservation, and islet isolation. A major factor influencing islet function is exposure of pancreata to cold ischemia during unavoidable windows of preservation by static cold storage (SCS). Improved preservation methods may prevent this functional deterioration. In the present study, we investigated whether pancreas preservation by gaseous oxygen perfusion (persufflation) better preserved islet function versus SCS. Methods Human pancreata were preserved by SCS or by persufflation in combination with SCS. Islets were subsequently isolated, and preparations in each group matched for SCS or total preservation time were compared using dynamic glucose-stimulated insulin secretion as a measure of β-cell function and RNA sequencing to elucidate transcriptomic changes. Results Persufflated pancreata had reduced SCS time, which resulted in islets with higher glucose-stimulated insulin secretion compared to islets from SCS only pancreata. RNA sequencing of islets from persufflated pancreata identified reduced inflammatory and greater metabolic gene expression, consistent with expectations of reducing cold ischemic exposure. Portions of these transcriptional responses were not associated with time spent in SCS and were attributable to pancreatic reoxygenation. Furthermore, persufflation extended the total preservation time by 50% without any detectable decline in islet function or viability. Conclusions These data demonstrate that pancreas preservation by persufflation rather than SCS before islet isolation reduces inflammatory responses and promotes metabolic pathways in human islets, which results in improved β cell function.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transplantation, vol 103, iss 1
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eae3b531ac5341a2be6fd0dcaefe3475