Abstract

Trophism between transplanted hepatocytes and pancreatic endocrine tissue has been demonstrated with both adult and late gestational fetal tissue. Since this effect has not been looked for with fetal tissue obtained early in pregnancy, we conducted a series of experiments transplanting human liver and pancreas, which was obtained early in the second trimester (15-20 weeks gestation), beneath the renal capsule of athymic mice. Fetal pancreatic explants increased in size after transplantation into nondiabetic mice, but their insulin content 11 weeks later was not different from that of grafts that included liver explants. Reversal of diabetes was achieved in 2 of 5 diabetic mice transplanted with pancreas alone, but none of the mice that received pancreas and liver became normoglycemic. Histological examination of grafted liver explants, which consist of hepatocytes and hematopoietic cells, showed that hepatocytes survived for only two weeks regardless of the presence of pancreatic explants. Bile ducts differentiated by this time in both groups and were still present at 7 weeks. In conclusion, there was no trophic effect observed between transplanted fetal human liver and pancreatic endocrine tissue obtained early in pregnancy; bile duct differentiation is a feature of fetal human liver xenografted into the athymic mouse.

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