Several reports have already shown that intrahepatic transplantation of purified islets can replace the pancreatic endocrine function in diabetic patients without major side effects for either the patients or their liver function [1][2][3][4][5]. Despite these encouraging results, the data of the International Islet Transplant Registry [6] are not as encouraging: in the 1989-1994 period only 28 out of 180 patients (16 %) maintained insulin independence for more than one week.This paper reports the experience at one institute (San Raffaele Scientific Institute, University of Milan) with 21 cases of islet/kidney transplantations in insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) patients. The roles of islet mass and quality, immunosuppressive therapy and post-implantation management on the final outcome of fresh islet transplantation in IDDM patients are considered. Diabetologia (1997) Summary This single-centre study investigated parameters that positively correlated with the success rate after islet allotransplantation in insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) patients. Twenty-one intrahepatic, fresh islet transplantations were performed in 20 IDDM patients (one patient had two transplants), after or simultaneous with kidney transplantation. The correlation between number and purity of transplanted islets and final outcome was investigated. One patient died of a cardiac arrest several hours after islet transplantation; this patient was not included in the follow-up analysis. Three patients (15 %) experienced acute, irreversible, early failure of islet function, which was considered as a 'presumed rejection'. Nine patients (45 %) achieved either complete insulin-independence (seven cases) or a reduction (> 50 %) of exogenous insulin requirement (two cases), with sustained serum C-peptide secretion (0.89 ± 0.04 nmol/l; duration: 21 ± 7 months, range 2-58 months). Liver biopsy, performed 3 years after transplantation in one successful case, showed normal islets within the hepatic parenchyma. Eight cases (40 %) did not show any metabolic effect of islet transplantation, with low serum C-peptide levels ('presumed function exhaustion'). Metabolic investigations performed in successful cases showed an early phase of insulin release after arginine, mild and reversible postprandial hyperglycaemia and normal HbA 1c levels. Success of islet transplantation positively correlates with the number (p < 0.05) of the transplanted islets. Islet transplantation is a safe procedure, with 45 % success rate, in terms of insulin-independence or relevant reduction of exogenous insulin requirement, although success can be transient. [Diabetologia (1997) 40: 225-231]
By immunocytochemistry and immunoblotting, we examined normal and neoplastic human tissues with polyclonal antibodies raised against selected peptide regions of proprotein convertase-2 and -3 (PC2 and PC3), two proteases that have been shown to selectively cleave neuroendocrine precursor molecules at pairs of basic residues. Immunoreactivity for both enzymes was detected in neuroendocrine cells of pituitary, gut, pancreas, thyroid, and adrenals and in tumors thereof, but was absent in thyroid follicular cells, parathyroids, adrenal cortex, testes, and a number of nonneuroendocrine tissues, both normal and tumorous. Although both PCs were virtually universal concomitants of the neuroendocrine system, cells with a neural phenotype (e.g. pheochromocytes and Merkel cells) predominantly contained PC2, whereas classic endocrine cells contained mostly PC3. PC3 immunoreactive cells were abundant all along the gastrointestinal tract, whereas PC2 was highly expressed only in the pyloric antrum and proximal third of duodenum. Double immunostaining experiments revealed colocalization of PC3 with virtually all gastrointestinal peptides, whereas PC2 immunoreactivity was mostly expressed in gastrin, cholecystokinin, and somatostatin cells. Noticeably, the proportion of glucagon-producing cells immunoreactive for PC3 was high in the gut and low in pancreatic islets and glucagonomas, whereas the reverse occurred for PC2. At the ultrastructural level, immunostaining was confined to the mature dense core granules, the site of storage of granins and peptide hormones. With the exception of parathyroid cells, PC2 and/or PC3 expression correlated with the occurrence of granins, canonical markers of the secretory granules. Immunoblotting experiments confirmed the identity of the immunocytochemical reactivities. It is concluded that PC2 and PC3 are highly sensitive markers of neuroendocrine differentiation and have distinct distribution patterns, and that antibodies to these enzymes may play an important role in the analysis of tumors.
The expression of gastrin/cholecystokinin (CCK) peptides and their precursors was examined in 16 medullary carcinomas of the human thyroid. Measurements with libraries of sequence-specific radioimmunoassays before and after enzymatic cleavage of extracts and chromatographic fractions showed that the carcinomas contained 1.7 pmol carboxyamidated CCK/g tissue (median; range 0.6-21.8 pmol/g), 0.9 pmol glycine-extended precursor/g (median; range less than 0.2-2.3 pmol/g) and 2.3 pmol further COOH-terminal-extended proCCK/g (median; range 0.9-6.2 pmol/g). Neither carboxyamidated gastrins nor any progastrins could be measured. Gel and reverse-phase chromatography revealed only small molecular forms, i.e. greater than 90% of the amidated immunoreactivity eluted like non-sulphated CCK-8 or CCK-7. The results show that human medullary thyroid carcinomas synthesize CCK peptides. The predominance of non-sulphated CCK is unusual. Taken together with earlier observations from dogs and pigs, our results raise the possibility that small non-sulphated CCK peptides modulate thyroid C-cell secretion in an autocrine manner.
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