In order to contribute to an increased understanding and highly efficacy of pancreatic islet transplantation as treatment of type I and type II diabetes a two pronged long range approach of research is outlined in the present component grant of the program project: 1) Quantitative Histochemistry (QH) will be applied to study glucose and energy metabolism of islet tissue in situ following transplantation into monoglycemic and diabetic animals. Parameters of metabolism to be studied will include glucose transport, glucose phosphorylation, glucose-6-P hydrolysis, the cellular redox and phosphate potentials. The dosage and metabolic state of the islet and the fuel homeostasis of the recipient will be manipulated to discover the factors that determine graft survival. Animal models of type I (BB/W rats) and type II (BHEcdb rats) diabetes will be used enhance the relevance in this approach. The research will gather important new information not obtainable by methods commonly applied to study islets during transplantation. 2) Modern techniques of genetic engineering using adenoviral vectors will be perfected to accomplish biologically and therapeutically useful alterations of glucose metabolism in islets that are to be used for transplantation. One important goal is reducing the immunogenicity of the viral vectors. Genetic engineering will include alterations of beta-cell glucokinase, glucose-6-phosphatase, lactic acid dehydrogenase and glycero-P-dehydrogenase, enzymes critically involved in glucose sensing. The impact of the genetic manipulation of islet tissue will be first assessed in vitro and the, after efficacy of the beta-cell transfection has been demonstrated, by OH analysis of the transplanted islet in situ and by evaluating the curative impact of the transplant.

Project Start
1998-06-01
Project End
1999-05-31
Budget Start
1997-10-01
Budget End
1998-09-30
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pennsylvania
Department
Type
DUNS #
042250712
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19104
Sun, Zheng; Miller, Russell A; Patel, Rajesh T et al. (2012) Hepatic Hdac3 promotes gluconeogenesis by repressing lipid synthesis and sequestration. Nat Med 18:934-42
Zhao, G; Moore, D J; Lee, K M et al. (2010) An unexpected counter-regulatory role of IL-10 in B-lymphocyte-mediated transplantation tolerance. Am J Transplant 10:796-801
Yang, Jichun; Wang, Chunjiong; Li, Jing et al. (2009) PANDER binds to the liver cell membrane and inhibits insulin signaling in HepG2 cells. FEBS Lett 583:3009-15
Huang, Xiaolun; Moore, Daniel J; Mohiuddin, Mohammad et al. (2008) Inhibition of ICAM-1/LFA-1 interactions prevents B-cell-dependent anti-CD45RB-induced transplantation tolerance. Transplantation 85:675-80
Noorchashm, Hooman; Reed, Amy J; Rostami, Susan Y et al. (2006) B cell-mediated antigen presentation is required for the pathogenesis of acute cardiac allograft rejection. J Immunol 177:7715-22
Quinn 3rd, William J; Noorchashm, Negin; Crowley, Jenni E et al. (2006) Cutting edge: impaired transitional B cell production and selection in the nonobese diabetic mouse. J Immunol 176:7159-64
Yang, Jichun; Wong, Ryan K; Park, MieJung et al. (2006) Leucine regulation of glucokinase and ATP synthase sensitizes glucose-induced insulin secretion in pancreatic beta-cells. Diabetes 55:193-201
Burkhardt, Brant R; Greene, Scott R; White, Peter et al. (2006) PANDER-induced cell-death genetic networks in islets reveal central role for caspase-3 and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (p21). Gene 369:134-41
Yang, Jichun; Gao, Zhiyong; Robert, Claudia E et al. (2005) Structure-function studies of PANDER, an islet specific cytokine inducing cell death of insulin-secreting beta cells. Biochemistry 44:11342-52
Reed, Amy J; Zarrabi, Yasaman; Perate, Alison L et al. (2005) The frequency of double-positive thymocytes expressing an alphabeta TCR clonotype regulates peripheral CD4 T cell compartment homeostasis. Immunology 116:400-7

Showing the most recent 10 out of 36 publications