Abstract

Islet transplantation is a useful cell replacement therapy that can restore the glycometabolic function of severe diabetic patients. It is known that many transplanted islets failed to engraft, and thus, new approaches for overcoming graft loss that may improve the outcome of future clinical islet transplantations are necessary. Pleckstrin homology-like domain family A, member 3 (PHLDA3) is a known suppressor of neuroendocrine tumorigenicity, yet deficiency of this gene increases islet proliferation, prevents islet apoptosis, and improves their insulin-releasing function without causing tumors. In this study, we examined the potential use of PHLDA3-deficient islets in transplantation. We observed that: 1) transplanting PHLDA3-deficient islets into diabetic mice significantly improved their glycometabolic condition, 2) the improved engraftment of PHLDA3-deficient islets resulted from increased cell survival during early transplantation, and 3) Akt activity was elevated in PHLDA3-deficient islets, especially under hypoxic conditions. Thus, we determined that PHLDA3-deficient islets are more resistant against stresses induced by islet isolation and transplantation. We conclude that use of islets with suppressed PHLDA3 expression could be a novel and promising treatment for improving engraftment and consequent glycemic control in islet transplantation.

Highlights

  • Islet transplantation is a useful cell replacement therapy that can restore the glycometabolic function of severe diabetes mellitus (DM) patients

  • We have previously found that Pleckstrin homology-like domain family A, member 3 (PHLDA3) is a novel p53—regulated repressor of Akt, and is a novel tumor suppressor of pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors [14]

  • We further observed no differences in the insulin-releasing functions between the PHLDA3-deficient and wild-type islets (n = 15 islets in both groups)

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Summary

Introduction

Islet transplantation is a useful cell replacement therapy that can restore the glycometabolic function of severe diabetes mellitus (DM) patients. PHLDA3 deficiency improves islets engraftment of Health, Labour and Welfare (R.O.), Cooperative Research Program of Institute for Frontier Medical Sciences, Kyoto University, Japan (to R.O.); URL: https://kaken.nii.ac.jp/ja/grant/KAKENHI-PROJECT26462053/, https://kaken.nii.ac.jp/ja/grant/ KAKENHI-PROJECT-15K19869/, https://kaken.nii.

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