Bioluminescent Monitoring of Islet Graft Survival after Transplantation

Yuxin Lu(University of California, Los Angeles), Hoa Dang(University of California, Los Angeles), Blake Middleton(University of California, Los Angeles), Zesong Zhang(University of California, Los Angeles), Lorraine Washburn(University of California, Los Angeles), Martha Campbell‐Thompson(University of Florida), Mark A. Atkinson(University of Florida), Sanjiv S. Gambhir(University of California, Los Angeles), Jide Tian(University of California, Los Angeles), Daniel L. Kaufman(University of California, Los Angeles)
Molecular Therapy
March 1, 2004
Cited by 98Open Access
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Abstract

Islet transplantation offers a potential therapy to restore glucose homeostasis in type 1 diabetes patients. A method to image transplanted islets noninvasively and repeatedly would greatly assist studies of islet transplantation. Using recombinant adenovirus, we show that isolated rodent and human islets can be genetically engineered to express luciferase and then imaged after implantation into NOD-scid mice using a cooled charge-coupled device. The magnitude of the signal was dependent on the islet dose. Adenovirus-directed luciferase expression, however, rapidly attenuated. We next tested lentivirus vectors that should direct the long-term expression of reporter genes in transduced islets. Transplanted lentivirus-transduced islets restored euglycemia long term in streptozotocin-treated NOD-scid mice. The signal from implanted lentivirus-transduced islets was related directly to the implanted islet mass, and the signal did not attenuate over the observation period. Viral transduction, luciferase expression, and repeated imaging had no apparent long-term deleterious effects on islet function after implantation. These data demonstrate that the introduction of reporter genes into an isolated tissue allows the long-term monitoring of its survival following implantation. Such imaging technologies may allow earlier detection of graft rejection and the adjustment of therapies to prolong graft survival posttransplantation.


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