US20090060843A1 - Non-Invasive In Vivo Imaging and Methods for Treating Type I Diabetes - Google Patents

Non-Invasive In Vivo Imaging and Methods for Treating Type I Diabetes Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20090060843A1
US20090060843A1 US12/199,473 US19947308A US2009060843A1 US 20090060843 A1 US20090060843 A1 US 20090060843A1 US 19947308 A US19947308 A US 19947308A US 2009060843 A1 US2009060843 A1 US 2009060843A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
eye
cells
islets
anterior chamber
target cells
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/199,473
Inventor
Per-Olof Berggren
Alejandro Caicedo
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Biocrine AB
Original Assignee
Biocrine AB
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Biocrine AB filed Critical Biocrine AB
Priority to US12/199,473 priority Critical patent/US20090060843A1/en
Assigned to BIOCRINE AB, JOHN ERIKSSONSGATAN 9, 112 22 STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN reassignment BIOCRINE AB, JOHN ERIKSSONSGATAN 9, 112 22 STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: BERGGREN, PER OLOF, CAICEDO, ALEJANDRO
Publication of US20090060843A1 publication Critical patent/US20090060843A1/en
Priority to US14/515,000 priority patent/US9463205B2/en
Priority to US15/265,212 priority patent/US10207012B2/en
Priority to US16/181,853 priority patent/US10493108B2/en
Priority to US16/669,840 priority patent/US20200061121A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K49/00Preparations for testing in vivo
    • A61K49/0004Screening or testing of compounds for diagnosis of disorders, assessment of conditions, e.g. renal clearance, gastric emptying, testing for diabetes, allergy, rheuma, pancreas functions
    • A61K49/0008Screening agents using (non-human) animal models or transgenic animal models or chimeric hosts, e.g. Alzheimer disease animal model, transgenic model for heart failure
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; CARE OF BIRDS, FISHES, INSECTS; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K67/00Rearing or breeding animals, not otherwise provided for; New breeds of animals
    • A01K67/027New breeds of vertebrates
    • A01K67/0271Chimeric animals, e.g. comprising exogenous cells
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K35/00Medicinal preparations containing materials or reaction products thereof with undetermined constitution
    • A61K35/12Materials from mammals; Compositions comprising non-specified tissues or cells; Compositions comprising non-embryonic stem cells; Genetically modified cells
    • A61K35/37Digestive system
    • A61K35/39Pancreas; Islets of Langerhans
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P3/00Drugs for disorders of the metabolism
    • A61P3/08Drugs for disorders of the metabolism for glucose homeostasis
    • A61P3/10Drugs for disorders of the metabolism for glucose homeostasis for hyperglycaemia, e.g. antidiabetics
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P31/00Antiinfectives, i.e. antibiotics, antiseptics, chemotherapeutics
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P5/00Drugs for disorders of the endocrine system
    • A61P5/48Drugs for disorders of the endocrine system of the pancreatic hormones
    • A61P5/50Drugs for disorders of the endocrine system of the pancreatic hormones for increasing or potentiating the activity of insulin
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P7/00Drugs for disorders of the blood or the extracellular fluid
    • A61P7/12Antidiuretics, e.g. drugs for diabetes insipidus
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N5/00Undifferentiated human, animal or plant cells, e.g. cell lines; Tissues; Cultivation or maintenance thereof; Culture media therefor
    • C12N5/06Animal cells or tissues; Human cells or tissues
    • C12N5/0602Vertebrate cells
    • C12N5/0676Pancreatic cells
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; CARE OF BIRDS, FISHES, INSECTS; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K2217/00Genetically modified animals
    • A01K2217/05Animals comprising random inserted nucleic acids (transgenic)
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; CARE OF BIRDS, FISHES, INSECTS; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K2227/00Animals characterised by species
    • A01K2227/10Mammal
    • A01K2227/105Murine
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; CARE OF BIRDS, FISHES, INSECTS; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K2267/00Animals characterised by purpose
    • A01K2267/03Animal model, e.g. for test or diseases
    • A01K2267/0306Animal model for genetic diseases
    • A01K2267/0325Animal model for autoimmune diseases
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12NMICROORGANISMS OR ENZYMES; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF; PROPAGATING, PRESERVING, OR MAINTAINING MICROORGANISMS; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING; CULTURE MEDIA
    • C12N2830/00Vector systems having a special element relevant for transcription
    • C12N2830/008Vector systems having a special element relevant for transcription cell type or tissue specific enhancer/promoter combination

Definitions

  • LSM confocal and two-photon laser-scanning microscopy
  • the present invention provides methods for drug development comprising:
  • the fluorescent imaging is used to detect test compound-induced changes in one or more of activity, location, and amount of the fluorescently labeled cellular components of therapeutic interest in the engrafted target cells, wherein the changes identify those test compounds that may provide a therapeutic benefit to the target cells.
  • the present invention provides methods for treating a subject with type I diabetes, comprising transplanting into the eye of a subject with type I diabetes an amount effective of an insulin-producing cell to promote insulin production in the subject.
  • FIG. 1 Pancreatic islets transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • FIG. 2 Non-invasive imaging of islet engraftment and vascularization. Images of an individual RIP-GFP islet graft 4 months after transplantation (optical section captured at a depth of 51 ⁇ m). (a) ⁇ -cell GFP fluorescence (green), (b) intravenously injected Texas Red fluorescence (red), and (c-d) 2D projection of an image stack corresponding to 100 ⁇ m thickness. (e-p) Image projections (110 ⁇ m thick) of an individual RIP-GFP islet graft at day 3, 7, 14 and 28 after transplantation.
  • FIG. 3 In vivo imaging of ⁇ -cell function.
  • FIG. 4 Non-invasive in vivo imaging of ⁇ -cell death.
  • (a-h) Image projections of an individual RIP-GFP islet graft in the anterior chamber of the eye. Under normal conditions, (a) ⁇ -cell GFP fluorescence, (b) reflection from the endocrine cells and (c) undetectable annexin V-APC labelling of the graft.
  • FIG. 5 Non-invasive imaging of islet engraftment and vascularization.
  • (a-f) Image projections (110 ⁇ m thick) of the same RIP-GFP islet graft as displayed in FIG. 2 are shown at 2 and 4 months after transplantation.
  • GFP fluorescence of ⁇ -cells (a,d) and Texas Red fluorescence in blood vessels (b,e) are displayed separately and as an overlay (c,f).
  • Scale bar 100 ⁇ m.
  • the present invention provides methods for drug development comprising:
  • the fluorescent imaging is used to detect test compound-induced changes in one or more of activity, location, and amount of the fluorescently labeled cellular components of therapeutic interest in the engrafted target cells, wherein the changes identify those test compounds that may provide a therapeutic benefit to the target cells.
  • the target cells to be transplanted may be individual cells, a plurality of cells of the same type, or a plurality of different cell types, such as tissues/tissue portions.
  • the cells may be of any type desired to be assessed, including but not limited to endocrine cells (including but not limited to pancreatic beta cells), and cells derived from any tissue type, including but not limited to fat, muscle, brain, liver, kidney, heart, and lungs.
  • the methods of the invention provide a novel platform for non-invasive in vivo drug development studies that take into account the physiology and pathophysiology of any cell or tissue.
  • the anterior chamber of the eye can be used as a versatile natural body window to clarify, for the first time, the integration of complex signaling networks at the cellular level under in vivo conditions.
  • Employing the anterior chamber of the eye as an in vivo model for assessing activity of one or more cellular components enables the continuous monitoring of, for example, morphology, vascularization, innervation, cell death, cell proliferation, cell development (including but not limited to stem cell development, tumor cell development, etc.), gene expression and cell signaling.
  • this platform can be used, for example, to elucidate the effects of modulatory inputs from, for example, the hormonal and neuronal system, as well as from autocrine/paracrine signals of endocrine or vascular cells. Furthermore, it serves as a novel approach for non-invasive in vivo studies of cell/tissue function and survival under healthy and non-healthy conditions.
  • the model system is ideal for use, for example, in drug discovery and testing of drug candidates (including but mot limited to drug candidates for treating cancer, diabetes, etc.) in vivo.
  • the test mammal can be any suitable test mammal in which cells can be transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye, including but not limited to mice, monkeys, rabbits, dogs, rats, and pigs.
  • the anterior chamber of the eye comprises the front portion of the eye, and includes the structure in front of the vitreous humour, as well as the cornea, iris, ciliary body, and lens.
  • Transplantation of target cells into the anterior chamber of the eye can comprise placement of the cells into any one or more of these anterior eye chamber compartments, so long as the target cells can be observed and fluorescent signals from the cells can be non-invasively visualized.
  • target cells are transplanted via injection through the cornea, allowing engraftment of the transplanted target cells onto the iris, permitting observation and imaging through the cornea.
  • the one or more cellular components of interest in the transplanted test cells are fluorescently labeled.
  • the labeling may be direct (i.e.: covalent interaction) or indirect (non-covalent interaction) cells may be labeled before or after transplantation.
  • Pre-transplantation labeling can be accomplished by any means known in the art, including but not limited to recombinant DNA techniques, such as transfection of the cells with an expression construct that will express a fluorescent protein-labeled cellular component of interest. Any fluorescent protein can be used including but not limited to green fluorescent protein and all of its variants.
  • Post-transplantation labeling can also be by any means known to those of skill in the art, including but not limited to injection of fluorescent stains of interest and contact with labeled antibodies.
  • Fluorescence imaging on the anterior eye chamber can be accomplished by any technique known to those of skill in the art, including but not limited to laser scanning microscopy.
  • the methods involve stimulating fluorescence from the labeled cellular components of interest by laser stimulation at appropriate wavelength(s) to non-invasively obtain fluorescence images of the cellular components in the transplanted cells.
  • any cellular component of interest can be assessed via the methods of the present invention.
  • Such activity can be any characteristic of the cellular component of interest that can be assessed based on detection of fluorescent signals from the cellular component of interest, including but not limited to expression, distribution, localization, amount, kinetics/dynamic changes, modifications, and oscillations.
  • the methods comprise assessing activity of the cellular component of interest over time.
  • the methods comprise performing fluorescent imaging at multiple time points, and changes in activity of the cellular component of interest can be assessed.
  • the assessment is done within individual cells.
  • the cellular component of interest comprises a component of a signal transduction pathway
  • the methods comprise assessing activity of the signal transduction pathway by assessing activity of the one or more cellular components of interest over time.
  • the test cells comprise pancreatic beta cells.
  • the methods comprise contacting the target cells with one or more test compounds and assessing the activity of the fluorescently labeled cellular components of interest in the target cells in response to the one or more test compounds.
  • Such contacting of the transplanted cells with the one or more test compounds can be pre or post-transplantation; preferably post-transplantation.
  • pancreatic islets of Langerhans are composed of several different cell types, including alpha-, beta- and delta-cells. These clusters of cells represent the endocrine pancreas and are of major importance for glucose homeostasis. Insufficient release of insulin from beta-cells in response to elevated blood glucose levels, leads to diabetes. The regulation of glucose induced insulin secretion from beta-cells is a complex process, modulated by autocrine, paracrine, hormonal and neuronal factors. Therefore, studies on vascularized and innervated islets of Langerhans are necessary to understand the mechanisms leading to hormone secretion in health and disease.
  • Diabetic mice could be rendered normoglycemic by transplanting islets of Langerhans to the anterior chamber of the eye and these mice showed identical responses to glucose tolerance tests compared to control mice.
  • This platform enables non-invasive assessment of multiple morphological and functional parameters in vascularized and innervated tissue.
  • the target cells and their regulatory input can be modulated not only systemically but also locally without difficulty.
  • Substances can be applied topically onto the eye or injected into the anterior chamber. Additionally, perfusion of the anterior chamber repetitively allows exchange of the aqueous humor or loading of the graft with fluorescent indicators.
  • the anterior chamber of the eye When utilizing the anterior chamber of the eye as a transplantation site, the special local features expressed to optimize visualization and to make the anterior chamber an immune privileged site are taken into consideration. Differences in the composition of the aqueous humor inside the anterior chamber and the blood plasma are kept in mind when interpreting observations made in the anterior chamber. However, our studies have shown no obvious effects on normal graft function by the local environment. One possible explanation might be that the induced neovascularization leads to an adjustment of aqueous humor and blood plasma composition. Thus, we have demonstrated that the anterior chamber of the eye enables studies of complex biological interactions in an in vivo system at single-cell resolution. Its current form is further extendible and implementation of newly developed fluorescent proteins, biosensors and transgenic animals will help to investigate numerous parameters important for development, function and survival under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions.
  • the present invention provides methods for treating a subject with type I diabetes, comprising transplanting into the eye of a subject with type I diabetes an amount effective of an insulin-producing cell to promote insulin production in the subject.
  • an “insulin-producing cell” is any cell type that is capable of producing insulin after transplantation into a subject's eye.
  • insulin-producing cells include, but are not limited to, pancreatic P cells, stem cells, and recombinant cells engineered to release insulin.
  • pancreatic ⁇ cells are any population of cells that contains pancreatic ⁇ islet cells. Such pancreatic ⁇ islet cell populations include the pancreas, isolated pancreatic islets of Langerhans (“pancreatic islets”) and isolated pancreatic ⁇ islet cells. Methods for pancreatic isolation are well known in the art, and methods for isolating pancreatic islets, can be found, for example, in Cejvan et al., Diabetes 52:1176-1181 (2003); Zambre et al., Biochem. Pharmacol. 57:1159-1164 (1999), and Fagan et al., Surgery 124:254-259 (1998), and references cited therein. Once implanted in the host eye, the beta cells in these islets begin to make and release insulin
  • the inventors have disclosed a new method for monitoring real-time events in cells such as pancreatic ⁇ cells by transplanting cells into the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • transplantation of pancreatic ⁇ cells into the eye has not led to any serious complication, such as vision loss or excessive eye irritation.
  • the eye provides a somewhat immunoprivilaged compartment
  • transplantation of insulin-producing cells into the eye of patients with type I diabetes can provide the necessary insulin production, while allowing a lowered dosage of immunosuppressant drugs to be used, reducing the potentially severe side effects of immunosuppression.
  • transplantation into the eye will reduce any period of anoxia during transplantation, resulting in an increased survival of the transplanted cells.
  • Transplantation into the eye preferably involves transplantation into the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • the anterior chamber of the eye comprises the front portion of the eye, and includes the structure in front of the vitreous humour, as well as the cornea, iris, ciliary body, and lens.
  • Transplantation of the insulin-producing cells into the anterior chamber of the eye can comprise placement of the cells into any one or more of these anterior eye chamber compartments.
  • test cells are transplanted via injection through the cornea, allowing engraftment of the transplanted cells onto the iris, permitting observation and imaging through the cornea.
  • Insulin producing cells such as pancreatic beta islets, transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye engrafted on the iris, became vascularized, retain their cellular composition, and respond to stimulation. Furthermore, they can be monitored by non-invasive laser scanning microscopy (LSM) allowed in vivo imaging of islet vascularization, as well as beta-cell function and insulin release.
  • LSM laser scanning microscopy
  • the insulin-producing cells or components thereof can be fluorescently labeled, and fluorescence imaging can be used to monitor cell activity.
  • Fluorescence imaging on the anterior eye chamber can be accomplished by any technique known to those of skill in the art, including but not limited to laser scanning microscopy.
  • the methods involve stimulating fluorescence from the labeled cellular components of interest by laser stimulation at appropriate wavelength(s) to non-invasively obtain fluorescence images of the cellular components in the transplanted cells.
  • Impaired insulin release and thereby defect glucose homeostasis in the body is a hallmark of diabetes (1).
  • insulin release from the pancreatic ⁇ -cell is regulated by the complex and concerted actions of cell metabolic activity, autocrine/paracrine signalling, and continuous input from hormones and neurotransmitters (2).
  • the ⁇ -cells, together with other endocrine cell types, are situated within the endocrine pancreas, the islets of Langerhans, which are densely vascularised (3) and abundantly innervated (4). Therefore, to fully understand the complexity of ⁇ -cell signal-transduction and the mechanisms controlling insulin release in health and disease, studies need to be conducted in vascularised and innervated islets in vivo.
  • C57BL6 and Tie2-GFP mice (STOCK Tg(TIE2GFP)287Sato/J) were purchased from the Jackson Laboratories (Bar Harbor, Me.).
  • RIP-GFP mice were generated at a core-facility at Karolinska Institutet and were characterized by a normal glucose tolerance and ⁇ -cell restricted expression of GFP (see Methods). All experiments were approved by the local animal ethics committees at Karolinska Institutet and the University of Miami.
  • pancreatic islets were isolated and cultured as described (25). Thirty to three hundred islets were transferred from culture media to sterile PBS and aspirated into a 27 G eye cannula connected to a 1 ml Hamilton syringe (Hamilton, Reno, Nev.) via a 0.4 mm polythene tubing (Portex Limited, Kent, England). Mice were anesthetized using isoflurane (Isoflurane, Abott Scandinavia AB, Solna, Sweden) and 0.1 ml/kg of Temgesic (Schering-Plough, N.J.) was subcutaneously injected to relieve post-operative pain.
  • isoflurane Isoflurane, Abott Scandinavia AB, Solna, Sweden
  • Temgesic Schering-Plough, N.J.
  • the cornea was punctured close to the sclera at the bottom part of the eye with a 27 G needle. Great care was taken not to damage the iris and to avoid bleeding.
  • the blunt eye cannula was gently inserted and the islets were slowly injected into the anterior chamber where they settled on the iris. After injection, the cannula was carefully withdrawn and the animal was left lying on the side before awakening. The mice quickly recovered and showed no signs of stress or irritation from the transplanted eye.
  • Intravital imaging of islets transplanted to the anterior chamber of the eye Previously transplanted mice were anesthetized with a 40% oxygen and ⁇ 2% isoflurane (Isoflurane) mixture, placed on a heating pad. The mouse head was restrained with a stereotaxic headholder (SG-4N, Narishige, Tokyo, Japan) and positioned with the eye containing the engrafted islets facing up. The eyelid was carefully pulled back and the eye was gently held at the corneoscleral junction with a pair of tweezers attached to a UST-2 Solid Universal Joint (Narishige). The tips of the tweezers were covered with a single piece of polythene tubing creating a loop between the two tips.
  • Isoflurane isoflurane
  • GFP and Texas Red were excited at 890 nm and emission light was collected and separated onto two nondescanned detectors using a dicronic mirror (RSP560) and emission filters (BP 525/50 and BP 640/20).
  • the images captured with TPLSM were denoised using wavelet filtering as previously described (27).
  • 100 ⁇ l of annexin V-APC (Molecular Probes) were intravenously injected via the tail vein.
  • GFP was excited at 488 nm (35% AOTF) and emission light was collected between 495-530 nm. Reflected light was imaged by illumination at 546 nm (35% AOTF) and collection between 539-547 nm.
  • APC was excited at 633 nm (75% AOTF), with collection of emission light between 644-680 nm.
  • Initial studies showed weak annexin V-APC labelling of RIPGFP islet grafts ⁇ 40 min after administration with a gradual increase.
  • the islet grafts were imaged 4-6 h after administration of annexin V-APC.
  • the image stacks captured with CLSM were denoised using median filtering. All displayed fluorescence images have been subjected to changes in brightness and contrast for optimal visualization.
  • RIP-GFP mice were generated by injections of the RIP1.EGFP expression cassette (rat insulin-1 promoter ⁇ 410/+1 bp-EGFPSV40polyA) into one-cell stage embryos from B6CBAF1/Crl donors. The obtained F0 generation was scored for RIP1.EGFP genomic integration by PCR analysis. The RIP1.EGFP transgene was observed in seven potential transgenic founders (17.5%), which were mated with inbred C57Bl/6NCrl mice to generate F1 animals. The founder lines were screened with regards to 1) the expression of GFP in ⁇ -cells as determined by immunostaining, and 2) animal and cell physiology. The RIP1.EGFP founder line #29 was found to have a normal glucose tolerance when compared to control animals and ⁇ -cell restricted expression of GFP, and was selected for homozygote breeding.
  • RIP1.EGFP founder line #29 was found to have a normal glucose tolerance when compared to control animals and ⁇ -cell restricted expression of GFP, and was selected for homo
  • the graft-bearing eyes were removed and postfixed for 1 h in 4% paraformaldehyde.
  • the vessel density was determined as the number of vessel segments per graft area.
  • a vessel segment was defined as a single vessel or a branch of a vessel.
  • the ⁇ -cell GFP fluorescence was used to define the graft area.
  • Two optical sections were quantified from each islet graft. The optical sections were selected from image series of z-stacks. The first section was selected at the deepest level in the graft, without loss of signal. The second section was selected in the middle of the graft, between the surface and the deepest section.
  • the images for quantification were captured using 10 ⁇ or 20 ⁇ lenses and a zoom factor of 2.0 or greater. Data are presented as mean ⁇ SEM.
  • the quantification of the vasculature was made with the Leica Confocal Software (version 2.61).
  • mice were anesthetized with 10 ml/kg of a mixture of 1 part Hypnorm (0.315 mg/ml fentanyl and 10 mg/ml fluanisone, VetaPharma, Leeds, UK), 1 part Dormicum (5 mg/ml, Roche, Basel Switzerland) and 2 parts sterile water. To prolong anesthesia, subsequent injections of the mixture (4 ml/kg) were administered every 30-40 min. Mice were placed on the microscope setup as described above, and body temperature was controlled via a rectal probe connected to the control unit of the heating pad.
  • Hypnorm 0.315 mg/ml fentanyl and 10 mg/ml fluanisone, VetaPharma, Leeds, UK
  • Dormicum 5 mg/ml, Roche, Basel Switzerland
  • mice were placed on the microscope setup as described above, and body temperature was controlled via a rectal probe connected to the control unit of the heating pad.
  • Micropipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass capillaries on a horizontal programmable puller (DMZ Universal Puller, Zeitz-Instrumente, Augsburg, Germany) and broken to a tip outer diameter of 60-100 ⁇ m. Adjacent micropipette tips were bevelled at an angle of 30° using a rotating wheel grinder (model BV10, Sutter Instruments Co., Novato, Calif., USA). Micropipettes were introduced into the anterior chamber by penetrating the cornea at shallow angles on opposite sides of the eye using two micromanipulator units (Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany). Care was taken not to damage the iris or islet grafts. One micropipette was attached to a reservoir filled with extracellular solution via polyethylene tubing.
  • the height of the reservoir was adjusted to assure a constant intracameral pressure of about 15 mmHg.
  • the second micropipette was connected to a 1 ml syringe. Rate and volume of inflow was controlled by a syringe pump (Univector). Islet cells were loaded with Ca2+ indicators by perfusing the anterior chamber with extracellular solution containing Fluo-4 and Fura-Red AM esters for 40 min at 3 ⁇ l/min. Subsequently, the dye containing solution was washed out by perfusion with extracellular solution for 10 min at 5-6 ⁇ l/min.
  • Imaging was performed as described above exciting Fluo-4 and Fura-Red at 488 nm (25% AOTF) and collecting emission light for Fluo-4 between 495-535 nm and for Fura-Red between 600-700 nm.
  • Systemic stimulation of insulin release was achieved by intravenous injection of glibenclamide (1 mg/kg) via the tail vein.
  • mice were subcutaneously injected with 0.1 ml/kg of Temgesic (Schering-Plough, N.J.) to relieve post-operative pain.
  • Pancreatic islets are hardly accessible for in vivo monitoring because they are deeply embedded and scattered in the exocrine tissue of the pancreas, constituting 1-2% of the pancreatic volume 5.
  • Isolated islets (6) and especially pancreatic slices (7) allow functional studies of ⁇ -cells in a multi-cellular environment.
  • these preparations are restricted to defined end-points and partially lack input from vascular and nervous connections.
  • pancreatic islets After islet transplantation, islets recruit a new vasculature (11) as well as nervous Connections (12), and are capable of maintaining glucose homeostasis via pulsatile insulin release (12,13).
  • pancreatic islets into the anterior chamber of the eye because the cornea acts as a natural body window that allows noninvasive imaging of engrafted tissue.
  • the anterior chamber of the eye has been frequently used as a transplantation site to study a variety of tissues including pancreas because it is immune privileged (14-17).
  • Mouse islets were transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye via injection through the cornea ( FIG. 1 a ). After transplantation, the islets engrafted on the iris and were readily observed and imaged through the cornea ( FIG. 1 b - c ).
  • the transplanted islets engrafted either as single islets or in groups as islet clusters. Immunohistochemical staining of engrafted islets showed that the proportion of the insulin-containing ⁇ -cells and glucagon-containing ⁇ -cells did not change after transplantation and that this proportion was similar to that of islets in the pancreas ( FIG. 1 d - h ), which is in agreement with earlier Studies (14,16,17).
  • mice that were rendered diabetic with streptozotocin transplanting islets into the anterior chamber reversed hyperglycaemia. These mice further showed physiological responses to glucose challenges ( FIG. 1 i ), demonstrating that islets engrafted in the anterior chamber of the eye are functional.
  • islets isolated from transgenic mice expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP) under the control of the rat insulin 1 promoter (RIP-GFP) were transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • TPLSM two-photon LSM
  • the same RIP-GFP islets were repeatedly imaged at day 3, 7, 14 and 28 after transplantation ( FIG. 2 e - p ).
  • the transplanted islets were attached to the iris and structural rearrangements of iris vessels in the vicinity of the islets were observed. However, only few vessels were found to have grown into the peripheral regions of the islets ( FIG. 2 e - g ).
  • the islet grafts appeared thinner but wider compared to day 3, indicating that the islets had further attached and spread out onto the iris.
  • An increased number of blood vessels were found in the islets and capillary loops were found to start penetrating the central islet regions ( FIG.
  • non-invasive TPLSM enabled longitudinal in vivo imaging of ⁇ -cells and the vasculature in islets engrafted in the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • [Ca2+]i increased simultaneously in different regions of the islets, reflecting a synchronized response of ⁇ -cells within an islet after stimulation 20 ( FIG. 3 g ).
  • ⁇ -cell death is a characteristics of type 1 diabetes (21) and is implicated in the pathology of type 2 diabetes (22).
  • Annexin V has been used as a reporter of cell death both under experimental and clinical conditions (23) and has been validated as a marker for ⁇ -cell apoptosis after systemic administration (24).
  • RIP-GFP islets into the anterior chamber of the eye and, after complete engraftment and revascularization, we monitored cell death following intravenously administered annexin V conjugated to allophycocyanin (APC).
  • mice transplanted with RIP-GFP islets by intravenous administration of alloxan (75 mg/kg), a well-characterized diabetogenic compound that is taken up by ⁇ -cells via the glucose transporter 2 (26).
  • substantial loss of GFP fluorescence and structural changes in the reflection of the islet grafts were observed ( FIG. 4 e - f ), indicating loss of ⁇ -cells.
  • the anterior chamber of the eye can be used as a versatile natural body window to clarify, for the first time, the integration of complex signalling networks at the cellular level under in vivo conditions.
  • the tissue of interest is transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye and cell biological parameters are assessed by LSM through the cornea.
  • the anterior chamber of the eye has been frequently used as a transplantation site to study a variety of tissues 3-7 . While originally the anterior chamber of the eye was selected as a transplantation site because of its properties as an immune privileged site 8 , most studies utilized the anterior chamber in a syngeneic transplantation setting because it is easily accessible and the cornea allows macroscopic observation of the engrafted tissue.
  • the iris which forms the base of the anterior chamber, has one of the highest concentrations of blood vessels and autonomic nerves in the body, and thereby enables fast innervation 9 and vascularization 10 of the graft.
  • studies utilizing the anterior chamber as a transplantation site mainly employed macroscopic observations 5 to investigate graft physiology. This restricts longitudinal studies to parameters observable at low resolution.
  • In vivo electrophysiology 7 as well as histology 3 and various other in vitro techniques after graft removal enable assessment of morphology and cellular function, however setting an endpoint to the study and hereby preventing longitudinal monitoring.
  • Extracellular solution 140 NaCl, 5 KCl, 2 NaHCO 3 , 1 NaH 2 PO 4 , 1.2 MgCl 2 , 2.5 CaCl 2 , 10 HEPES, 3 glucose (pH 7.4 with NaOH).
  • LSM Leica TCS-SP2-AOBS confocal laser scanner equipped with Argon and HeNe lasers connected to a Leica DMLFSA microscope.
  • Two-photon excitation is achieved using a Ti:Sapphire laser (Tsunami; Spectra-Physics, USA) for ⁇ 100 fs excitation at ⁇ 82 MHz.
  • the microscope stage is customized for the use of head holding adaptor and mouse.
  • a head holding adapter SG-4N-S manufactured by Narishige, Japan.
  • the head holder is equipped with a gas mask (GM-4-S) or a nosepiece.
  • GM-4-S gas mask
  • the head holder is attached to a metal plate which fits onto the customized stage of the microscope.
  • the metal plate is covered by a heating pad.
  • Body temperature is controlled via a rectal probe which regulates the temperature of the heating pad.
  • Outflow Connect a ⁇ 35 cm piece of polythene tubing 0.9 mm i.d. and 1.2 mm o.d. with one end to a capillary holder and connect the other end of the tubing to a 10 ml syringe without a plunger (open reservoir).
  • Inflow Connect a ⁇ 35 cm piece of tygon tubing 0.76 mm i.d. and 0.86 mm wall thickness with one end to a capillary holder and connect the other end of the tubing to a 1 ml syringe.
  • Anterior chamber perfusion is modified from ref. 18.
  • Imaging of graft vascularization (steps 13 B, i-ii or iii-iv): ⁇ 1 h/mouse
  • step 13 D i Imaging of cytoplasmic free Ca 2+ concentration after loading the graft with Ca 2+ indicators via perfusion of the anterior chamber of the eye (step 13 D i): ⁇ 1.5 h/4-6 pipettes; (steps 13 D ii-xx): ⁇ 2 h/mouse
  • the here introduced platform enables longitudinal assessment of several biological parameters in vivo without the need of invasive surgical procedures to access the tissue of interest.
  • the current protocol easily enables detection of islet graft morphology by reflection or fluorescence imaging.
  • Morphological characterization of a pancreatic islet graft by imaging reflection and GFP was carried out in which. islets of mice expressing GFP under the insulin promoter (green beta-cells) were transplanted to mice expressing GFP under the Tie2 promoter (green endothelial cells).
  • GFP was excited with 488 nm at 35% laser power and emission measured between 495-530 nm. Reflection was imaged by exciting with 633 nm at 35% laser power and measuring emission between 632-639 nm.
  • vascularization and cell death can be followed longitudinally by systemic injections of fluorescent dyes.
  • Blood vessels were visualized by an intravenous injection of a 70 kDa Texas Red labeled dextran. GFP and Texas Red were excited with a two-photon laser at 890 nm at minimal necessary laser power required and emission collected onto non-descanned detectors using a dichroic mirror (RSP 560) and emission filters (BP 525/50 and BP 640/20).
  • RSP 560 dichroic mirror
  • BP 525/50 and BP 640/20 emission filters
  • beta-cell death was induced by intravenous injection of alloxan.
  • Apoptotic and dead cells were visualized by intravenous injection of annexin V-APC.
  • Reflection was imaged by exciting with 543 nm and emission measured between 539-547 nm at 35% laser power.
  • GFP was excited at 488 nm and emission measured between 495-530 nm at 35% laser power.
  • APC was excited at 633 nm with collection of emission light between 645-680 nm at 75% laser power.
  • islet-cells can be loaded repetitively with Ca 2+ indicators, by perfusion of the anterior chamber, to measure systemically induced changes in cytoplasmic free Ca 2+ concentration.
  • the anterior chamber was perfused with Fluo-4 and Fura-Red. Fluo-4 and Fura-Red were excited with 488 nm at 25% laser power and emission measured for Fluo-4 between 495-535 nm and for Fura-Red between 600-700 nm. Reflection was imaged by exciting with 543 nm and emission measured between 539-547 nm at 15% laser power.

Abstract

The present invention provides novel drug discovery platforms and methods for treating type I diabetes.

Description

    CROSS REFERENCE
  • This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. Nos. 60/969,437 filed Aug. 31, 2007, 61/042,482 filed Apr. 4, 2008, and 60/989,038 filed Nov. 19, 2007, all incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
  • STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
  • The work disclosed herein was supported in part by National Institute of Health Grant Numbers DK-58508 and DK-075487 and thus the U.S. government has certain rights in the invention.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • Fundamental understanding of cellular processes in health and disease has been gained by studying cells of various tissues in vitro. However, results obtained from experiments in vitro are often not sufficient to explain the performance of cells in more physiological settings like whole organs or living organisms. To place observations made in an in vitro system into a physiological context, studies have to be performed under in vivo conditions. In recent years an increasing number of approaches have been made to investigate cell function in situ utilizing imaging techniques. Unfortunately, non-invasive imaging techniques like computer tomography (CT), magnet resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET) or bioluminescence imaging (BLI) lack cellular resolution. On the other hand, confocal and two-photon laser-scanning microscopy (LSM) provide sub-cellular resolution but have a fairly limited working distance and imaging depth2. Accessing target cells for the application of LSM is mostly invasive and often excludes the possibility of repetitive examinations.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention provides methods for drug development comprising:
  • (a) engrafting target cells into the eye of a test animal, wherein one or more cellular component of therapeutic interest in the transplanted target cells are fluorescently labeled;
  • (b) contacting the target cells with one or more test compounds; and
  • (c) performing non-invasive fluorescent imaging on the eye of the test animal,
  • wherein the fluorescent imaging is used to detect test compound-induced changes in one or more of activity, location, and amount of the fluorescently labeled cellular components of therapeutic interest in the engrafted target cells, wherein the changes identify those test compounds that may provide a therapeutic benefit to the target cells.
  • In another aspect, the present invention provides methods for treating a subject with type I diabetes, comprising transplanting into the eye of a subject with type I diabetes an amount effective of an insulin-producing cell to promote insulin production in the subject.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
  • FIG. 1. Pancreatic islets transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye. (a) Islet transplantation into the anterior chamber of the eye. (b) Set up for non-invasive in vivo imaging. (c) Digital photograph of islets engrafted on the iris in the anterior chamber of the eye. (d-g) Eye sections containing islet grafts showing insulin-immunoreactive β-cells (red) and glucagonimmunoreactive β-cells (green) at different time-points after transplantation.
  • (h) The ratio of insulin to glucagon immunoreactive cells in islets in the pancreas and in the anterior chamber of the eye at indicated time-points after transplantation. (i) Plasma glucose levels during an intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test in streptozotocin-treated mice transplanted with islets into the eye (n=8, black) and under the kidney capsule (n=2, red).
  • FIG. 2. Non-invasive imaging of islet engraftment and vascularization. Images of an individual RIP-GFP islet graft 4 months after transplantation (optical section captured at a depth of 51 μm). (a) β-cell GFP fluorescence (green), (b) intravenously injected Texas Red fluorescence (red), and (c-d) 2D projection of an image stack corresponding to 100 μm thickness. (e-p) Image projections (110 μm thick) of an individual RIP-GFP islet graft at day 3, 7, 14 and 28 after transplantation. GFP fluorescence of β-cells (e,h,k,n) and Texas Red fluorescence in blood vessels (f,i,l,o) are displayed separately and as an overlay (g,j,m,p). Scale bars, 100 μm. (q-r) Quantification of results shown in (e-p) The number of analyzed islet grafts is indicated in brackets at respective time-points.
  • FIG. 3. In vivo imaging of β-cell function. (a-e) Fluorescence images of Fluo-4 and Fura-Red at indicated time points after systemic application of glibenclamide (1 mg/kg) at 3 min. (f) Whole frame Fluo-4/Fura-Red ratio change in response to given glibenclamide stimulus, start of stimulation indicated by arrow. (g) Ratio change in individual cells throughout the islet as indicated in panel (a). (h-i) Maximum projections of Fluo-4 (green) and Fura-Red (red) fluorescence of a whole islet before (h) and after stimulation with glibenclamide (i). (j-k) Ratiometric display of Fluo-4/Fura-Red of the islet in panel (h) and (i). Scale bar, 50 μm.
  • FIG. 4. Non-invasive in vivo imaging of β-cell death. (a-h) Image projections of an individual RIP-GFP islet graft in the anterior chamber of the eye. Under normal conditions, (a) β-cell GFP fluorescence, (b) reflection from the endocrine cells and (c) undetectable annexin V-APC labelling of the graft. (d) Overlay image of (a-c) with the reflection image in blue. Twenty-four hours after induction of β-cell death, (e) β-cell GFP fluorescence, (f) reflection and (g) strong annexin V-APC fluorescence of the islet graft. (h) Overlay image of (e-g) with the reflection image in blue. (i-j) High magnification images of an islet graft area strongly labelled with annexin V-APC after induction of β-cell death. (i) β-cell GFP fluorescence, (j) annexin V-APC fluorescence and (k) overlay of (i-j). (l) Overlay of (k) with the reflection image (blue). Scale bars, 100 μm.
  • FIG. 5. Non-invasive imaging of islet engraftment and vascularization. (a-f) Image projections (110 μm thick) of the same RIP-GFP islet graft as displayed in FIG. 2 are shown at 2 and 4 months after transplantation. GFP fluorescence of β-cells (a,d) and Texas Red fluorescence in blood vessels (b,e) are displayed separately and as an overlay (c,f). Scale bar, 100 μm.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
  • In one aspect, the present invention provides methods for drug development comprising:
  • (a) engrafting target cells into the eye of a test animal, wherein one or more cellular component of therapeutic interest in the transplanted target cells are fluorescently labeled;
  • (b) contacting the target cells with one or more test compounds; and
  • (c) performing non-invasive fluorescent imaging on the eye of the test animal,
  • wherein the fluorescent imaging is used to detect test compound-induced changes in one or more of activity, location, and amount of the fluorescently labeled cellular components of therapeutic interest in the engrafted target cells, wherein the changes identify those test compounds that may provide a therapeutic benefit to the target cells.
  • As used herein, the target cells to be transplanted may be individual cells, a plurality of cells of the same type, or a plurality of different cell types, such as tissues/tissue portions. The cells may be of any type desired to be assessed, including but not limited to endocrine cells (including but not limited to pancreatic beta cells), and cells derived from any tissue type, including but not limited to fat, muscle, brain, liver, kidney, heart, and lungs.
  • The methods of the invention provide a novel platform for non-invasive in vivo drug development studies that take into account the physiology and pathophysiology of any cell or tissue. In one embodiment, the anterior chamber of the eye can be used as a versatile natural body window to clarify, for the first time, the integration of complex signaling networks at the cellular level under in vivo conditions. Employing the anterior chamber of the eye as an in vivo model for assessing activity of one or more cellular components enables the continuous monitoring of, for example, morphology, vascularization, innervation, cell death, cell proliferation, cell development (including but not limited to stem cell development, tumor cell development, etc.), gene expression and cell signaling. The use of this platform can be used, for example, to elucidate the effects of modulatory inputs from, for example, the hormonal and neuronal system, as well as from autocrine/paracrine signals of endocrine or vascular cells. Furthermore, it serves as a novel approach for non-invasive in vivo studies of cell/tissue function and survival under healthy and non-healthy conditions. Thus, the model system is ideal for use, for example, in drug discovery and testing of drug candidates (including but mot limited to drug candidates for treating cancer, diabetes, etc.) in vivo.
  • The test mammal can be any suitable test mammal in which cells can be transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye, including but not limited to mice, monkeys, rabbits, dogs, rats, and pigs.
  • The anterior chamber of the eye comprises the front portion of the eye, and includes the structure in front of the vitreous humour, as well as the cornea, iris, ciliary body, and lens. Transplantation of target cells into the anterior chamber of the eye can comprise placement of the cells into any one or more of these anterior eye chamber compartments, so long as the target cells can be observed and fluorescent signals from the cells can be non-invasively visualized. In one non-limiting example, target cells are transplanted via injection through the cornea, allowing engraftment of the transplanted target cells onto the iris, permitting observation and imaging through the cornea.
  • The one or more cellular components of interest in the transplanted test cells are fluorescently labeled. The labeling may be direct (i.e.: covalent interaction) or indirect (non-covalent interaction) cells may be labeled before or after transplantation. Pre-transplantation labeling can be accomplished by any means known in the art, including but not limited to recombinant DNA techniques, such as transfection of the cells with an expression construct that will express a fluorescent protein-labeled cellular component of interest. Any fluorescent protein can be used including but not limited to green fluorescent protein and all of its variants. Post-transplantation labeling can also be by any means known to those of skill in the art, including but not limited to injection of fluorescent stains of interest and contact with labeled antibodies.
  • Fluorescence imaging on the anterior eye chamber can be accomplished by any technique known to those of skill in the art, including but not limited to laser scanning microscopy. In one embodiment, the methods involve stimulating fluorescence from the labeled cellular components of interest by laser stimulation at appropriate wavelength(s) to non-invasively obtain fluorescence images of the cellular components in the transplanted cells.
  • The activity of any cellular component of interest can be assessed via the methods of the present invention. Such activity can be any characteristic of the cellular component of interest that can be assessed based on detection of fluorescent signals from the cellular component of interest, including but not limited to expression, distribution, localization, amount, kinetics/dynamic changes, modifications, and oscillations. In a further embodiment, the methods comprise assessing activity of the cellular component of interest over time. In this embodiment, the methods comprise performing fluorescent imaging at multiple time points, and changes in activity of the cellular component of interest can be assessed. In an embodiment of all of the embodiments herein, the assessment is done within individual cells.
  • In one non-limiting embodiment, the cellular component of interest comprises a component of a signal transduction pathway, and the methods comprise assessing activity of the signal transduction pathway by assessing activity of the one or more cellular components of interest over time. In a further non-limiting embodiment, the test cells comprise pancreatic beta cells.
  • The methods comprise contacting the target cells with one or more test compounds and assessing the activity of the fluorescently labeled cellular components of interest in the target cells in response to the one or more test compounds. Such contacting of the transplanted cells with the one or more test compounds can be pre or post-transplantation; preferably post-transplantation.
  • In the examples below, we transplanted isolated pancreatic islets of Langerhans into the anterior chamber of the eye. Islets of Langerhans are composed of several different cell types, including alpha-, beta- and delta-cells. These clusters of cells represent the endocrine pancreas and are of major importance for glucose homeostasis. Insufficient release of insulin from beta-cells in response to elevated blood glucose levels, leads to diabetes. The regulation of glucose induced insulin secretion from beta-cells is a complex process, modulated by autocrine, paracrine, hormonal and neuronal factors. Therefore, studies on vascularized and innervated islets of Langerhans are necessary to understand the mechanisms leading to hormone secretion in health and disease. However, due to the scattered distribution of islets of Langerhans throughout the exocrine pancreas and the anatomy of the rodent pancreas in particular, non-invasive longitudinal in vivo studies of the islets of Langerhans at single-cell resolution are currently not feasible.
  • We show below, that after transplantation to the anterior chamber of the eye, isolated islets readily engrafted. Diabetic mice could be rendered normoglycemic by transplanting islets of Langerhans to the anterior chamber of the eye and these mice showed identical responses to glucose tolerance tests compared to control mice. We were able to longitudinally monitor morphology of the islets and follow the revascularization process. We could also repetitively measure systemically induced changes in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration in beta-cells of the same islet. Finally, we non-invasively monitor chemically induced cell death in islets after systemic injection of a beta-cell toxin.
  • This platform enables non-invasive assessment of multiple morphological and functional parameters in vascularized and innervated tissue. Although the examples focus on pancreatic islets of Langerhans the introduced platform can be used to investigate all kinds of tissues. Different types of tissues, transplanted to the anterior chamber of the eye, have been shown to attract vessels and nerves and establish organotypic vascularization10,12 and innervation4,5,13. This allows studying tissues in a setting comparable to their natural surrounding without having to access the tissue in an invasive manner. Furthermore, due to the characteristics of the eye, the target cells and their regulatory input can be modulated not only systemically but also locally without difficulty. Substances can be applied topically onto the eye or injected into the anterior chamber. Additionally, perfusion of the anterior chamber repetitively allows exchange of the aqueous humor or loading of the graft with fluorescent indicators.
  • When utilizing the anterior chamber of the eye as a transplantation site, the special local features expressed to optimize visualization and to make the anterior chamber an immune privileged site are taken into consideration. Differences in the composition of the aqueous humor inside the anterior chamber and the blood plasma are kept in mind when interpreting observations made in the anterior chamber. However, our studies have shown no obvious effects on normal graft function by the local environment. One possible explanation might be that the induced neovascularization leads to an adjustment of aqueous humor and blood plasma composition. Thus, we have demonstrated that the anterior chamber of the eye enables studies of complex biological interactions in an in vivo system at single-cell resolution. Its current form is further extendible and implementation of newly developed fluorescent proteins, biosensors and transgenic animals will help to investigate numerous parameters important for development, function and survival under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions.
  • In another aspect, the present invention provides methods for treating a subject with type I diabetes, comprising transplanting into the eye of a subject with type I diabetes an amount effective of an insulin-producing cell to promote insulin production in the subject.
  • As used in this aspect, an “insulin-producing cell” is any cell type that is capable of producing insulin after transplantation into a subject's eye. Such insulin-producing cells include, but are not limited to, pancreatic P cells, stem cells, and recombinant cells engineered to release insulin.
  • As used herein, “pancreatic β cells” are any population of cells that contains pancreatic β islet cells. Such pancreatic β islet cell populations include the pancreas, isolated pancreatic islets of Langerhans (“pancreatic islets”) and isolated pancreatic β islet cells. Methods for pancreatic isolation are well known in the art, and methods for isolating pancreatic islets, can be found, for example, in Cejvan et al., Diabetes 52:1176-1181 (2003); Zambre et al., Biochem. Pharmacol. 57:1159-1164 (1999), and Fagan et al., Surgery 124:254-259 (1998), and references cited therein. Once implanted in the host eye, the beta cells in these islets begin to make and release insulin
  • As disclosed herein, the inventors have disclosed a new method for monitoring real-time events in cells such as pancreatic β cells by transplanting cells into the anterior chamber of the eye. In conducting these studies, the inventors have determined that transplantation of pancreatic β cells into the eye has not led to any serious complication, such as vision loss or excessive eye irritation. Thus, given that the eye provides a somewhat immunoprivilaged compartment, it is believed that transplantation of insulin-producing cells into the eye of patients with type I diabetes can provide the necessary insulin production, while allowing a lowered dosage of immunosuppressant drugs to be used, reducing the potentially severe side effects of immunosuppression. It is also believed that transplantation into the eye will reduce any period of anoxia during transplantation, resulting in an increased survival of the transplanted cells.
  • Transplantation into the eye preferably involves transplantation into the anterior chamber of the eye. The anterior chamber of the eye comprises the front portion of the eye, and includes the structure in front of the vitreous humour, as well as the cornea, iris, ciliary body, and lens. Transplantation of the insulin-producing cells into the anterior chamber of the eye can comprise placement of the cells into any one or more of these anterior eye chamber compartments. In one non-limiting example, test cells are transplanted via injection through the cornea, allowing engraftment of the transplanted cells onto the iris, permitting observation and imaging through the cornea. Insulin producing cells, such as pancreatic beta islets, transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye engrafted on the iris, became vascularized, retain their cellular composition, and respond to stimulation. Furthermore, they can be monitored by non-invasive laser scanning microscopy (LSM) allowed in vivo imaging of islet vascularization, as well as beta-cell function and insulin release. In these embodiments, the insulin-producing cells or components thereof can be fluorescently labeled, and fluorescence imaging can be used to monitor cell activity.
  • Fluorescence imaging on the anterior eye chamber can be accomplished by any technique known to those of skill in the art, including but not limited to laser scanning microscopy. In one embodiment, the methods involve stimulating fluorescence from the labeled cellular components of interest by laser stimulation at appropriate wavelength(s) to non-invasively obtain fluorescence images of the cellular components in the transplanted cells.
  • EXAMPLE 1
  • Impaired insulin release and thereby defect glucose homeostasis in the body is a hallmark of diabetes (1). Under physiological conditions, insulin release from the pancreatic β-cell is regulated by the complex and concerted actions of cell metabolic activity, autocrine/paracrine signalling, and continuous input from hormones and neurotransmitters (2). The β-cells, together with other endocrine cell types, are situated within the endocrine pancreas, the islets of Langerhans, which are densely vascularised (3) and abundantly innervated (4). Therefore, to fully understand the complexity of β-cell signal-transduction and the mechanisms controlling insulin release in health and disease, studies need to be conducted in vascularised and innervated islets in vivo. Here, we introduce a novel noninvasive technical platform for in vivo fluorescence imaging of pancreatic islets transplanted into the anterior chamber of the mouse eye. Islets transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye engrafted on the iris, became vascularised, retained cellular composition and responded to stimulation. Non-invasive laserscanning microscopy (LSM) allowed in vivo imaging of islet vascularization, as well as β-cell function and death. Our results thus establish the basis for repetitive non-invasive in vivo investigations of β-cell signal-transduction, which can be performed longitudinally under both normal and diabetic conditions.
  • Methods and Materials
  • Mouse models. C57BL6 and Tie2-GFP mice (STOCK Tg(TIE2GFP)287Sato/J) were purchased from the Jackson Laboratories (Bar Harbor, Me.). RIP-GFP mice were generated at a core-facility at Karolinska Institutet and were characterized by a normal glucose tolerance and β-cell restricted expression of GFP (see Methods). All experiments were approved by the local animal ethics committees at Karolinska Institutet and the University of Miami.
  • Transplantation of pancreatic islets to the anterior chamber of the eye. Pancreatic islets were isolated and cultured as described (25). Thirty to three hundred islets were transferred from culture media to sterile PBS and aspirated into a 27 G eye cannula connected to a 1 ml Hamilton syringe (Hamilton, Reno, Nev.) via a 0.4 mm polythene tubing (Portex Limited, Kent, England). Mice were anesthetized using isoflurane (Isoflurane, Abott Scandinavia AB, Solna, Sweden) and 0.1 ml/kg of Temgesic (Schering-Plough, N.J.) was subcutaneously injected to relieve post-operative pain. Under a stereomicroscope, the cornea was punctured close to the sclera at the bottom part of the eye with a 27 G needle. Great care was taken not to damage the iris and to avoid bleeding. Next, the blunt eye cannula was gently inserted and the islets were slowly injected into the anterior chamber where they settled on the iris. After injection, the cannula was carefully withdrawn and the animal was left lying on the side before awakening. The mice quickly recovered and showed no signs of stress or irritation from the transplanted eye.
  • Intravital imaging of islets transplanted to the anterior chamber of the eye. Previously transplanted mice were anesthetized with a 40% oxygen and ˜2% isoflurane (Isoflurane) mixture, placed on a heating pad. The mouse head was restrained with a stereotaxic headholder (SG-4N, Narishige, Tokyo, Japan) and positioned with the eye containing the engrafted islets facing up. The eyelid was carefully pulled back and the eye was gently held at the corneoscleral junction with a pair of tweezers attached to a UST-2 Solid Universal Joint (Narishige). The tips of the tweezers were covered with a single piece of polythene tubing creating a loop between the two tips. This arrangement permitted a flexible but stable fixation of the head and eye without causing damage or disrupting the blood circulation in the eye. An upright Leica DMLFSA microscope, equipped with a TCS-SP2-AOBS confocal scanner and lasers for two-photon excitation 25, was used for imaging together with long distance water-dipping lenses (Leica HXC APO 10×0.3W, 20×0.5W, 40×0.8W), using filtered saline as an immersion liquid. For visualization of blood vessels, Texas Red (100 μl of 10 mg/ml; Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.) was intravenously injected via the tail vein. GFP and Texas Red were excited at 890 nm and emission light was collected and separated onto two nondescanned detectors using a dicronic mirror (RSP560) and emission filters (BP 525/50 and BP 640/20). The images captured with TPLSM were denoised using wavelet filtering as previously described (27). For visualization of cell death, 100 μl of annexin V-APC (Molecular Probes) were intravenously injected via the tail vein. GFP was excited at 488 nm (35% AOTF) and emission light was collected between 495-530 nm. Reflected light was imaged by illumination at 546 nm (35% AOTF) and collection between 539-547 nm. APC was excited at 633 nm (75% AOTF), with collection of emission light between 644-680 nm. Initial studies showed weak annexin V-APC labelling of RIPGFP islet grafts ˜40 min after administration with a gradual increase. The islet grafts were imaged 4-6 h after administration of annexin V-APC. The image stacks captured with CLSM were denoised using median filtering. All displayed fluorescence images have been subjected to changes in brightness and contrast for optimal visualization.
  • Generation of RIP-GFP mice. RIP-GFP mice were generated by injections of the RIP1.EGFP expression cassette (rat insulin-1 promoter −410/+1 bp-EGFPSV40polyA) into one-cell stage embryos from B6CBAF1/Crl donors. The obtained F0 generation was scored for RIP1.EGFP genomic integration by PCR analysis. The RIP1.EGFP transgene was observed in seven potential transgenic founders (17.5%), which were mated with inbred C57Bl/6NCrl mice to generate F1 animals. The founder lines were screened with regards to 1) the expression of GFP in β-cells as determined by immunostaining, and 2) animal and cell physiology. The RIP1.EGFP founder line #29 was found to have a normal glucose tolerance when compared to control animals and β-cell restricted expression of GFP, and was selected for homozygote breeding.
  • Immunohistochemistry. Mice were killed by exposure to a rising concentration of CO2 followed by cervical dislocation, after 3, 7, 14, and 28 days subsequent to intraocular islet transplantation (n=12). The graft-bearing eyes were removed and postfixed for 1 h in 4% paraformaldehyde. After cryoprotection by sucrose substitution (10%, 20%, and 30% in PBS), vertical sections of the eyes were cut on a cryostat (14 μm). Sections were washed in PBS (3×10 min) and incubated in PBS containing 5% bovine serum albumin and 0.1% triton (1 h). Thereafter, sections were incubated overnight in PBS with anti insulin (1:500, Accurate Chemical & Scientific Corp., NY), and anti glucagon (1:5000; Sigma, St Louis Mo.). Immunostaining was visualized using either Alexa 488 or Alexa 568 conjugated secondary antibodies (1:500; Molecular Probes). Cell nuclei were stained with DAPI (Molecular Probes). Slides were mounted with Vectamount and coverslipped. Serial cross sections of eyes containing islets were examined for the presence of insulin and glucagon with an Axiophot fluorescence microscope (Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) and a dual-channel laser scanning confocal microscope (Olympus Fluoview, Olympus America Inc., Melville, N.Y.). All immunostaining images were digitally acquired and recompiled (Photoshop 5.0; Adobe, San Jose, Calif.). Sections were viewed at 10× and 40× magnification. Analyses were done on digitized fluorescence microscopic images using Zeiss Axiovision software. Measured parameters (e.g. ratio insulinimmunoreactive cells/glucagon-immunoreactive cells) were calculated as the average from at least three adjacent sections from at least two separate islets per eye. The results from three eyes were averaged. Only cells that had a clearly labeled nucleus (DAPI staining) were included in the analyses. Data are presented as mean±SEM.
  • Quantification of islet graft vasculature. The vessel density was determined as the number of vessel segments per graft area. A vessel segment was defined as a single vessel or a branch of a vessel. The β-cell GFP fluorescence was used to define the graft area. Two optical sections were quantified from each islet graft. The optical sections were selected from image series of z-stacks. The first section was selected at the deepest level in the graft, without loss of signal. The second section was selected in the middle of the graft, between the surface and the deepest section. The images for quantification were captured using 10× or 20× lenses and a zoom factor of 2.0 or greater. Data are presented as mean±SEM. The quantification of the vasculature was made with the Leica Confocal Software (version 2.61).
  • In vivo recording of [Ca2+]i changes. To assess function of β-cells in vivo, islets transplanted to the anterior chamber of the eye were loaded with a mixture of the Ca2+ indicators Fluo-4 and Fura-Red. Applying these two dyes simultaneously allowed ratiometric [Ca2+]i measurements with excitation spectra in the visible wavelengths (29). To achieve loading, the anterior chamber was perfused with an extracellular solution consisting of (in mM) 140 NaCl, 5 KCl, 2 NaHCO3, 1 NaH2PO4, 1.2 MgCl2, 2.5 CaCl2, 10 HEPES, 3 glucose (pH 7.4 with KOH), containing 500 μM of each AM ester of Fluo-4 and Fura-Red. For perfusion, mice were anesthetized with 10 ml/kg of a mixture of 1 part Hypnorm (0.315 mg/ml fentanyl and 10 mg/ml fluanisone, VetaPharma, Leeds, UK), 1 part Dormicum (5 mg/ml, Roche, Basel Switzerland) and 2 parts sterile water. To prolong anesthesia, subsequent injections of the mixture (4 ml/kg) were administered every 30-40 min. Mice were placed on the microscope setup as described above, and body temperature was controlled via a rectal probe connected to the control unit of the heating pad. Micropipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass capillaries on a horizontal programmable puller (DMZ Universal Puller, Zeitz-Instrumente, Augsburg, Germany) and broken to a tip outer diameter of 60-100 μm. Adjacent micropipette tips were bevelled at an angle of 30° using a rotating wheel grinder (model BV10, Sutter Instruments Co., Novato, Calif., USA). Micropipettes were introduced into the anterior chamber by penetrating the cornea at shallow angles on opposite sides of the eye using two micromanipulator units (Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany). Care was taken not to damage the iris or islet grafts. One micropipette was attached to a reservoir filled with extracellular solution via polyethylene tubing. The height of the reservoir was adjusted to assure a constant intracameral pressure of about 15 mmHg. The second micropipette was connected to a 1 ml syringe. Rate and volume of inflow was controlled by a syringe pump (Univector). Islet cells were loaded with Ca2+ indicators by perfusing the anterior chamber with extracellular solution containing Fluo-4 and Fura-Red AM esters for 40 min at 3 μl/min. Subsequently, the dye containing solution was washed out by perfusion with extracellular solution for 10 min at 5-6 μl/min. Imaging was performed as described above exciting Fluo-4 and Fura-Red at 488 nm (25% AOTF) and collecting emission light for Fluo-4 between 495-535 nm and for Fura-Red between 600-700 nm. Systemic stimulation of insulin release was achieved by intravenous injection of glibenclamide (1 mg/kg) via the tail vein. After finishing imaging, mice were subcutaneously injected with 0.1 ml/kg of Temgesic (Schering-Plough, N.J.) to relieve post-operative pain.
  • Results
  • Pancreatic islets are hardly accessible for in vivo monitoring because they are deeply embedded and scattered in the exocrine tissue of the pancreas, constituting 1-2% of the pancreatic volume 5. As a consequence, the majority of today's functional β-cell studies are conducted in vitro on isolated islets/cells. Isolated islets (6) and especially pancreatic slices (7) allow functional studies of β-cells in a multi-cellular environment. However, these preparations are restricted to defined end-points and partially lack input from vascular and nervous connections. There is an immediate need to monitor β-cell function in vivo to understand the complex signalling networks involved in the regulation of insulin release under normal conditions, and why these do not function properly in type 2 diabetes. This is also the case in the context of clinical islet transplantation, which is emerging as a therapy for type 1 diabetes (8.) To date, monitoring β-cell signal-transduction after experimental and clinical islet transplantation has not been possible, which has severely hampered both the characterization of the graft function and the evaluation of new interventions (9). LSM has been successfully applied for imaging of multiple signaling pathways in the β-cell using isolated islets and cell preparations (6,10). However, intravital applications of LSM for studies of β-cell physiology have not been reported.
  • After islet transplantation, islets recruit a new vasculature (11) as well as nervous Connections (12), and are capable of maintaining glucose homeostasis via pulsatile insulin release (12,13). We decided to transplant pancreatic islets into the anterior chamber of the eye because the cornea acts as a natural body window that allows noninvasive imaging of engrafted tissue. The anterior chamber of the eye has been frequently used as a transplantation site to study a variety of tissues including pancreas because it is immune privileged (14-17). Mouse islets were transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye via injection through the cornea (FIG. 1 a). After transplantation, the islets engrafted on the iris and were readily observed and imaged through the cornea (FIG. 1 b-c). The transplanted islets engrafted either as single islets or in groups as islet clusters. Immunohistochemical staining of engrafted islets showed that the proportion of the insulin-containing β-cells and glucagon-containing β-cells did not change after transplantation and that this proportion was similar to that of islets in the pancreas (FIG. 1 d-h), which is in agreement with earlier Studies (14,16,17).
  • In mice that were rendered diabetic with streptozotocin, transplanting islets into the anterior chamber reversed hyperglycaemia. These mice further showed physiological responses to glucose challenges (FIG. 1 i), demonstrating that islets engrafted in the anterior chamber of the eye are functional. To allow identification of β-cells, islets isolated from transgenic mice expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP) under the control of the rat insulin 1 promoter (RIP-GFP) were transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • By using two-photon LSM (TPLSM) we imaged simultaneously β-cells by GFP and the vasculature following intravenous injection of 100 μl Texas Red 70 kDa dextran (Texas Red, 10 mg/ml) and determined that transplanted islets recruited blood vessels from the iris. Non-invasive TPLSM enabled capturing of optical sections at different depths in the engrafted islets (FIG. 2 a,b), and thereby 3D (3-dimensional) reconstruction of both the H cell and the vascular morphology within the islet grafts (FIG. 2 c-d). To monitor the dynamics of islet engraftment and vascularization, the same RIP-GFP islets were repeatedly imaged at day 3, 7, 14 and 28 after transplantation (FIG. 2 e-p). At day 3, the transplanted islets were attached to the iris and structural rearrangements of iris vessels in the vicinity of the islets were observed. However, only few vessels were found to have grown into the peripheral regions of the islets (FIG. 2 e-g). At day 7, the islet grafts appeared thinner but wider compared to day 3, indicating that the islets had further attached and spread out onto the iris. An increased number of blood vessels were found in the islets and capillary loops were found to start penetrating the central islet regions (FIG. 2 h-j). While only minor additional changes in islet structure occurred after day 7, blood vessels continued to grow, and at day 14 they formed a microvascular network throughout the islet grafts (FIG. 2 k-m). Between day 14 and day 28, the vascular network became denser, and at day 28 it was characterized by highly tortuous and uniformly sized capillaries (FIG. 2 n-p). The vessel density of the transplanted islets continuously increased during revascularization (FIG. 2 q). The diameter of islet graft vessels was 8.11±0.53 μm at day 28 (n=5, FIG. 2 r), which is similar to the intra-islet vasculature in the pancreas (18) and at other transplantation sites (19). Imaging of islet grafts at two and four months after transplantation showed that the morphology of the β-cell mass and the graft vasculature were similar compared to day 28 (FIG. 5). In conclusion, non-invasive TPLSM enabled longitudinal in vivo imaging of β-cells and the vasculature in islets engrafted in the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • The assessment of signal-transduction in vivo at the cellular level would allow investigation of islet cells under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions, including regulatory and modulatory influences from paracrine, hormonal, and neuronal signals. To monitor cell function in vivo, we studied changes in cytoplasmatic free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) in islets at the single cell level in the anterior chamber of the eye. Changes in [Ca2+]i are key intracellular signals in islet cells and serve as a reporter of β-cell function 2. We loaded islets with the Ca2+ indicators Fluo-4 and Fura-Red via perfusion of the anterior chamber of the eye with micropipettes. Applying these two dyes simultaneously allowed ratiometric measurements of [Ca2+]i changes with LSM and correction for movements of the islets during imaging. Fluo-4 and Fura-Red labelled the outer layer of the islets homogenously (FIG. 3 h-i). To stimulate cells, we applied the sulfonylurea compound glibenclamide intravenously. This decreased blood glucose levels, indicating that the administration was effective (data not shown). Increases in [Ca2+]i in islet cells, as demonstrated by prominent rises in the Fluo-4/Fura-Red fluorescence ratio, started within 30 to 40 seconds after glibenclamide injection into the tail vein of the mouse and remained high throughout the recording (FIG. 3 f). [Ca2+]i increased simultaneously in different regions of the islets, reflecting a synchronized response of β-cells within an islet after stimulation 20 (FIG. 3 g). These results demonstrate that it is feasible to image islet cell function in vivo employing engrafted islets in the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • β-cell death is a characteristics of type 1 diabetes (21) and is implicated in the pathology of type 2 diabetes (22). To date, no methods exist for continuous monitoring of β-cell death in vivo. Annexin V has been used as a reporter of cell death both under experimental and clinical conditions (23) and has been validated as a marker for β-cell apoptosis after systemic administration (24). To investigate the feasibility of noninvasive imaging of β-cell death, we transplanted RIP-GFP islets into the anterior chamber of the eye and, after complete engraftment and revascularization, we monitored cell death following intravenously administered annexin V conjugated to allophycocyanin (APC). Using confocal LSM, GFP- and annexin V-APC fluorescence were captured simultaneously with reflected light, whereby the latter provides detailed structural information of endocrine cells (25). Transplanted RIP-GFP islets imaged in mice with regular blood glucose levels displayed normal morphology (FIG. 4 a-b) and absence of annexin V-APC labelling (FIG. 4 c-d). Annexin VAPC was only found to label a few cells in 1 out of 10 RIP-GFP islet grafts (data not shown), indicating a low incidence of cell death in islets engrafted in the anterior chamber of the eye. We induced β-cell death in mice transplanted with RIP-GFP islets by intravenous administration of alloxan (75 mg/kg), a well-characterized diabetogenic compound that is taken up by β-cells via the glucose transporter 2 (26). This treatment rendered mice hyperglycemic with a blood glucose concentration of 25.0±1.3 mmol/l (n=6) after 24 h. At this time-point, substantial loss of GFP fluorescence and structural changes in the reflection of the islet grafts were observed (FIG. 4 e-f), indicating loss of β-cells. Administration of annexin V-APC (n=4) 24 h after the induction of cell death resulted in strong labelling of islet grafts (FIG. 4 gh). High magnification imaging revealed that most annexin V-APC labelling was found in graft regions devoid of GFP fluorescence. Some annexin V-APC fluorescence was found on the surface of GFP-fluorescent β-cells, indicating labeling of cells undergoing apoptosis (FIG. 4 i-l). We conclude that β-cell death can be imaged non-invasively and longitudinally under in vivo conditions in islets engrafted in the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • SUMMARY
  • We have now introduced a novel platform for non-invasive studies of islet cell both physiology and pathophysiology in vivo. Employing the anterior chamber of the eye as an in vivo model for islet cell research enables the continuous monitoring of morphology, vascularisation, innervation, cell death, and cell signalling. The use of this platform to study islet cell signal-transduction in vivo will help elucidating the effects of modulatory inputs from the hormonal and neuronal system, as well as from autocrine/paracrine signals of endocrine or vascular cells. Furthermore, it will serve as a novel approach for non-invasive in vivo studies of β-cell function and survival under healthy and diabetic conditions. Noteworthy is, that this platform is not limited to studies of pancreatic β-cell signal-transduction but can readily be extended to investigate numerous other cell types and organ tissues in vivo. Hence, the anterior chamber of the eye can be used as a versatile natural body window to clarify, for the first time, the integration of complex signalling networks at the cellular level under in vivo conditions.
  • REFERENCES FOR EXAMPLE 1
    • 1. Wajchenberg, B. L. Beta-Cell Failure in Diabetes and Preservation by Clinical Treatment. Endocr Rev (2007).
    • 2. Berggren, P. O. & Leibiger, I. B. Novel aspects on signal-transduction in the pancreatic beta-cell. Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis 16 Suppl 1, S7-10 (2006).
    • 3. Vetterlein, F., Petho, A. & Schmidt, G. Morphometric investigation of the microvascular system of pancreatic exocrine and endocrine tissue in the rat. Microvasc Res 34, 231-8 (1987).
    • 4. Woods, S. C. & Porte, D., Jr. Neural control of the endocrine pancreas. Physiol Rev 54, 596-619 (1974).
    • 5. Rahier, J., Goebbels, R. M. & Henquin, J. C. Cellular composition of the human diabetic pancreas. Diabetologia 24, 366-71 (1983).
    • 6. Köhler, M. et al. Imaging of Pancreatic Beta-Cell Signal-Transduction. Curr. Med. Chem.-Immun., Endoc. & Metab. Agents 4, 281-299 (2004).
    • 7. Speier, S. & Rupnik, M. A novel approach to in situ characterization of pancreatic beta-cells. Pflugers Arch 446, 553-8 (2003).
    • 8. Shapiro, A. M. et al. Islet transplantation in seven patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus using a glucocorticoid-free immunosuppressive regimen. N Engl J Med 343, 230-8 (2000).
    • 9. Paty, B. W., Bonner-Weir, S., Laughlin, M. R., McEwan, A. J. & Shapiro, A. M. Toward development of imaging modalities for islets after transplantation: insights from the National Institutes of Health Workshop on Beta Cell Imaging. Transplantation 77, 1133-7 (2004).
    • 10. Philipson, L. H. & Roe, M. W. Imaging. Curr. Med. Chem.-Immun., Endoc. & Metab. Agents 4, 333-337 (2004).
    • 11. Menger, M. D., Yamauchi, J. & Vollmar, B. Revascularization and microcirculation of freely grafted islets of Langerhans. World J Surg 25, 509-15 (2001).
    • 12. Porksen, N. et al. Coordinate pulsatile insulin secretion by chronic intraportally transplanted islets in the isolated perfused rat liver. J Clin Invest 94, 219-27 (1994).
    • 13. Meier, J. J. et al. Intrahepatic transplanted islets in humans secrete insulin in a coordinate pulsatile manner directly into the liver. Diabetes 55, 2324-32 (2006).
    • 14. Hultquist, G. T. The ultrastructure of pancreatic tissue from duct-ligated rats implanted into anterior chamber of rat eyes. Ups J Med Sci 77, 8-18 (1972).
    • 15. Niederkorn, J. Y. Immune privilege in the anterior chamber of the eye. Crit Rev Immunol 22, 13-46 (2002).
    • 16. Adeghate, E. & Donath, T. Morphological findings in long-term pancreatic tissue transplants in the anterior eye chamber of rats. Pancreas 5, 298-305 (1990).
    • 17. Adeghate, E., Ponery, A. S., Ahmed, I. & Donath, T. Comparative morphology and biochemistry of pancreatic tissue fragments transplanted into the anterior eye chamber and subcutaneous regions of the rat. Eur J Morphol 39, 257-68 (2001).
    • 18. Vetterlein, F., Petho, A. & Schmidt, G. Distribution of capillary blood flow in rat kidney during postischemic renal failure. Am J Physiol 251, H510-9 (1986).
    • 19. Menger, M. D., Vajkoczy, P., Leiderer, R., Jager, S. & Messmer, K. Influence of experimental hyperglycemia on microvascular blood perfusion of pancreatic islet isografts. J Clin Invest 90, 1361-9 (1992).
    • 20. Valdeolmillos, M., Santos, R. M., Contreras, D., Soria, B. & Rosario, L. M. Glucose-induced oscillations of intracellular Ca2+ concentration resembling bursting electrical activity in single mouse islets of Langerhans. FEBS Lett 259, 19-23 (1989).
    • 21. Mathis, D., Vence, L. & Benoist, C. beta-Cell death during progression to diabetes. Nature 414, 792-8 (2001).
    • 22. Butler, A. E. et al. Beta-cell deficit and increased beta-cell apoptosis in humans with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes 52, 102-10 (2003).
    • 23. Boersma, H. H. et al. Past, present, and future of annexin A5: from protein discovery to clinical applications. J Nucl Med 46, 2035-50 (2005).
    • 24. Medarova, Z., Bonner-Weir, S., Lipes, M. & Moore, A. Imaging beta-cell death with a near-infrared probe. Diabetes 54, 1780-8 (2005).
    • 25. Nyqvist, D., Köhler, M., Wahlstedt, H. & Berggren, P. O. Donor islet endothelial cells participate in formation of functional vessels within pancreatic islet grafts. Diabetes 54, 2287-93 (2005).
    • 26. Szkudelski, T. The mechanism of alloxan and streptozotocin action in B cells of the rat pancreas. Physiol Res 50, 537-46 (2001).
    • 27. Köhler, M. et al. On-line monitoring of apoptosis in insulin-secreting cells. Diabetes 52, 2943-50 (2003).
    • 28. Lipp, P. & Niggli, E. Ratiometric confocal Ca(2+)-measurements with visible wavelength indicators in isolated cardiac myocytes. Cell Calcium 14, 359-72 (1993).
    EXAMPLE 2
  • In this example, we provide a step-by-step protocol for non-invasive longitudinal in vivo studies of cell biology at single-cell resolution, taking advantage of the cornea as a natural body window. For this purpose, the tissue of interest is transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye and cell biological parameters are assessed by LSM through the cornea. The anterior chamber of the eye has been frequently used as a transplantation site to study a variety of tissues3-7. While originally the anterior chamber of the eye was selected as a transplantation site because of its properties as an immune privileged site8, most studies utilized the anterior chamber in a syngeneic transplantation setting because it is easily accessible and the cornea allows macroscopic observation of the engrafted tissue. Additionally, the iris, which forms the base of the anterior chamber, has one of the highest concentrations of blood vessels and autonomic nerves in the body, and thereby enables fast innervation9 and vascularization10 of the graft. Up to date studies utilizing the anterior chamber as a transplantation site mainly employed macroscopic observations5 to investigate graft physiology. This restricts longitudinal studies to parameters observable at low resolution. In vivo electrophysiology7 as well as histology3 and various other in vitro techniques after graft removal enable assessment of morphology and cellular function, however setting an endpoint to the study and hereby preventing longitudinal monitoring.
  • Materials Animals
      • NMRI mice (Charles River Laboratories, USA) or (Scanbur, Sweden)
      • Tie2-GFP mice [STOCK Tg(TIE2GFP)287Sato/J] (Jackson Laboratory, USA)
      • Transgenic mice with fluorescent reporters expressed in pancreatic beta-cells under the insulin promoter (RIP-GFP)11.
    Reagents
      • Sterile phosphate buffered saline (PBS)
      • Isoflurane (Isoflurane, Abott/Baxter, USA)
      • 40% O2 in 60% N2 (AGA, Sweden)
      • Butrenorphine (Temgesic, Schering-Plough, USA)
      • Viscotears® (Novartis, Switzerland)
      • Alloxan (Sigma, USA)
      • Texas Red 70 kDa dextran (Invitrogen, USA)
      • Annexin V APC (Invitrogen, USA)
      • Hypnorm® (VetaPharm, UK)
      • Dormicum® (Roche, Switzerland)
      • Sterile water for injection (Braun, Germany)
      • Fluo-4 AM special packaging (Invitrogen, USA)
      • Fura-Red AM special packaging (Invitrogen, USA)
      • Pluronic® F-127 (Invitrogen, USA)
      • Glibenclamide (Sigma, USA)
      • Extracellular solution
    Reagent Setup
  • Extracellular solution (in mM): 140 NaCl, 5 KCl, 2 NaHCO3, 1 NaH2PO4, 1.2 MgCl2, 2.5 CaCl2, 10 HEPES, 3 glucose (pH 7.4 with NaOH).
  • Equipment
      • 27 G×¾″ needle (BD, USA)
      • Blunt 27 G cannula, custom made of a 27 G needle
      • 0.5 ml threaded plunger Hamilton gastight syringe #1750 (Hamilton, USA)
      • polythene tubing 0.4 mm inner diameter (i.d.), 0.8 mm outer diameter (o.d.) (Smiths Medical, UK)
      • polythene tubing 0.2 mm i.d., 0.8 mm o.d.
  • polythene tubing 0.9 mm i.d., 1.2 mm o.d.
  • tygon tubing 0.76 mm i.d., 0.86 mm wall thickness (Ismatec, Switzerland)
      • 1, 5 and 10 ml plastic syringes (BD, USA)
      • 50 ml reagent tube (Eppendorf, Germany)
      • 400 Anesthesia Unit (Univentor, Malta)
      • Exmire Microsyringe MS-GLLX00 10 ml (Hamilton, USA)
      • Stereomicroscope MZ FLIII (Leica, Germany)
      • Head holding adapter (SG-4N, Narishige, Japan)
      • UST-2 Solid Universal Joint (Narishige, Japan)
      • Dumont #5 Forceps (Fine Science Tools, USA)
      • Custom-made heating pad
      • DMLFSA upright microscope, equipped with a TCS-SP2-AOBS confocal scanner (Leica, Germany)
      • Ti:Sapphire laser Tsunami (Spectra-Physics, USA)
      • 2.5× and 5× objectives (Leica, Germany)
      • long distance water-dipping lenses (Leica HXC APO 10×0.3W, 20×0.5W, 40×0.8W)
      • Micromanipulator 5171 (2) (Eppendorf, Germany)
      • Universal capillary holder (2) (Eppendorf, Germany)
      • Capillary grip head 1 (2) (Eppendorf, Germany)
      • Thin-wall borosilicate glass capillaries without filament TW120-4 (WPI, USA)
      • DMZ universal puller (Zeitz Instrumente, Germany)
      • 802 syringe pump (Univentor, Malta)
      • Leica Confocal Software (version 2.61) (Leica, Germany)
      • Volocity (Improvision, UK)
      • Matlab (The MathWorks, USA)
      • Wavelet filtering algorithm14 (Stockholm, Sweden)
    Equipment Setup Confocal and Two-Photon Setup
  • For LSM we use a Leica TCS-SP2-AOBS confocal laser scanner equipped with Argon and HeNe lasers connected to a Leica DMLFSA microscope. Two-photon excitation is achieved using a Ti:Sapphire laser (Tsunami; Spectra-Physics, USA) for ˜100 fs excitation at ˜82 MHz. The microscope stage is customized for the use of head holding adaptor and mouse.
  • Head Holding Adapter
  • To fix the head of the mouse for surgery and imaging, we employ a head holding adapter SG-4N-S manufactured by Narishige, Japan. Depending on the type of anesthesia used the head holder is equipped with a gas mask (GM-4-S) or a nosepiece. The head holder is attached to a metal plate which fits onto the customized stage of the microscope. The metal plate is covered by a heating pad. Body temperature is controlled via a rectal probe which regulates the temperature of the heating pad.
  • Eye Stabilizer
  • For retraction of the eye lids and additional stabilization of the eye we use a custom-made supporting device. Attach a #5 Dumont forceps to a small metal bar and clamp the metal bar into a UST-2 Solid Universal Joint. Fix the Universal Joint to the same metal plate as the head holder on level with the eye, so you can reach the eyes with the tips of the forceps. Cover the tips of the forceps with a piece of polyethylene tube, creating a loop between the tips. At the front part of the forceps attach a screw to enable adjustment of the distance between the forceps tips.
  • Anterior Chamber Perfusion
  • Outflow: Connect a ˜35 cm piece of polythene tubing 0.9 mm i.d. and 1.2 mm o.d. with one end to a capillary holder and connect the other end of the tubing to a 10 ml syringe without a plunger (open reservoir).
  • Inflow: Connect a ˜35 cm piece of tygon tubing 0.76 mm i.d. and 0.86 mm wall thickness with one end to a capillary holder and connect the other end of the tubing to a 1 ml syringe.
  • Image Processing
  • To denoise images captured with confocal LSM and TPLSM use wavelet filtering15. For analysis and image display use processing software e.g. Volocity and Leica confocal software.
  • Non-Limiting, Exemplary Procedure Transplantation of Pancreatic Islets to the Anterior Chamber of the Eye
    • 1 Isolate mouse pancreatic islets as previously described16,17.
      • Optionally culture islets, depending on study parameters.
    • 2 Connect about 10 cm of 0.4 mm i.d. polythene tubing with a 27 G needle to the 0.5 ml Hamilton syringe and insert the blunt 27 G cannula at the other end of the tubing.
    • 3 Transfer 30-40 islets from the culture medium to a dish with sterile PBS and center the islets as compact as possible in the middle of the dish.
    • 4 Aspirate the islets into the blunt 27 G cannula and the connected polythene tubing. The islets are preferably aspirated in a minimal volume (for example, 20 μl or less) to facilitate injection into the anterior chamber.
      • Aspirating the islets into too big a volume may lead to difficulties during the injection process by exposing the eye to unnecessary high intraocular pressure and may result in reflux of islets out of the anterior chamber after removing the cannula.
    • 5 Carry out the transplantation of islets to the anterior chamber of the eye according to option (A) or (B).
  • (A) Transplantation of Islets Using a Head Holder.
      • i Put a piece of cotton wool in a 50 ml reagent tube and drop about 1 ml Isoflurane onto the wool. Stun the mouse by holding it for a few seconds into the reagent tube.
      • ii Place the mouse in the head holder under a stereomicroscope and fix the head with the eye selected for transplantation facing upwards.
      • iii Anesthetize the mouse using Isoflurane, 2-2.5% in 40% O2 and 60% N2.
        • Isoflurane levels are carefully controlled to ensure a proper state of anesthesia. Vacuum is applied in the area of anesthesia to protect the operator.
      • iv Inject butrenorphine (0.05 mg/kg) subcutaneously to relieve post-operative pain.
      • v Carefully pull back the eyelids and gently place the polyethylene tubing loop of the eye stabilizer below the corneoscleral junction.
        • Care is taken when placing the stabilizing forceps to avoid disrupting blood circulation in the eye.
      • vi Connect a 27 G needle to a 1 ml syringe to ease handling. Use the 27 G needle to puncture the cornea close to the sclera while taking care not to damage the iris and to avoid bleeding.
      • vii Gently insert the blunt cannula into the anterior chamber of the eye through the hole made with the needle. Slowly inject the islets into the anterior chamber. After injection, carefully withdraw the cannula.
      • viii Leave the mouse in the head holder before awakening for additional 10-15 min. Remove the mouse from the head holder, turn off the Isoflurane and observe the mouse during awakening.
      • ix Put a drop of Viscotears on the eye to prevent desiccation.
        • A break is made until the in vivo imaging. The duration depends on study parameters.
  • (B) Transplantation of Islets without Using the Head Holder.
      • i Prepare a small gas mask from a 5 ml plastic syringe by removing the piston and cutting the syringe ˜1 cm above the bottom. Connect the tubing of the anesthetic pump to the needle fitting.
      • ii Stun the mouse by holding it for a few seconds into the 50 ml reagent tube with cotton and about 1 ml Isoflurane.
      • iii Place the mouse under a stereomicroscope on a heating pad with the eye selected for transplantation facing upwards. Put the nose of the mouse in the prepared gas mask.
      • iv Anesthetize the mouse using Isoflurane, 2-2.5% in 40% O2 and 60% N2.
        • Isoflurane levels are carefully controlled to ensure a proper state of anesthesia. Vacuum is applied in the area of anesthesia to protect the operator.
      • v Inject butrenorphine (0.05 mg/kg) subcutaneously to relieve post-operative pain.
      • vi Retract the skin around the eye to visualize the corneoscleral junction of the eye and gently fix the position of the head, without interrupting the breathing or blood circulation of the mouse.
      • vii Continue as described above under (A) from point vi to ix.
    Imaging of Islets Engrafted in the Anterior Chamber of the Eye
    • 6 Transplant islets according to steps 1-5. Choose donor and recipient mice depending on the aim of the study.
    • 7 Stun the recipient mouse by short exposure to Isoflurane.
    • 8 Place the mouse in the head holder and fix the head with the eye containing the transplanted islets facing upwards.
    • 9 Anesthetize the mouse using Isoflurane, 2-2.5% in 40% O2 and 60% N2.
      • Isoflurane levels are carefully controlled to ensure a proper state of anesthesia. Vacuum is applied in the area of anesthesia to protect the operator.
    • 10 Carefully pull back the eyelids and gently place the polyethylene tubing loop of the eye stabilizer below the corneoscleral junction.
      • Care is taken when placing the stabilizing forceps to not disrupt blood circulation in the eye.
    • 11 Place the head holder together with the mouse under an upright microscope equipped for confocal and two-photon LSM.
    • 12 To get an overview use low magnification objectives (2.5 and 5×). For high resolution LSM utilize water immersion dipping objectives (10, 20, and 40×) with a long-working distance using filtered saline or Viscotears as immersion liquid between the lens and the cornea.
      • Apply the minimum required laser-power and scan-time necessary for visualization to avoid photodamage and bleaching; for example, below 75 mW, and from 800 Hz and above.
    • 13 Image the biological parameter of interest:
  • (A) Imaging of Graft Morphology
      • i To visualize cell specific morphology, islets of transgenic mice expressing a fluorescent protein in beta-cells (e.g. RIP-GFP) can be used for transplantation. Excite GFP fluorescence with a 488 nm laser and detect emission between 495 and 530 nm. Islet morphology can also be imaged by detection of a reflection image. Choose a laser (e.g. 633 nm) and set the AOBS control to optimize reflection detection. Collect emission between ±4 nm of the laser wavelength.
  • (B) Imaging of Vascularization in the Iris and the Engrafted Islets
  • Visualize vascularization either by imaging endothelial cells or the blood vessel lumen.
      • i To image endothelial cells utilize Tie2-GFP mice for transplantation.
      • ii Excite GFP fluorescence with a 488 nm laser and detect emission between 495 and 530 nm.
      • iii For imaging of the blood vessel lumen inject 0.1 ml of 10 mg/ml of a fluorescently labeled dextran (70 kDa) intravenously into the tail vein.
      • iv Following injection of a fluorescently labeled dextran, image the engrafted islets using appropriate settings for the chosen dextran.
        • For simultaneous imaging of beta-cells and vessels transplant islets of RIP-GFP mice and inject Texas-Red conjugated dextran (70 kDa). Excite Texas Red and GFP with a two-photon laser at 890 nm and collect emission light onto non-descanned detectors using a dichroic mirror (RSP 560) and emission filters (BP 525/50 and BP 640/20).
  • (C) Imaging of Beta-Cell Death
      • i Induce beta-cell death in the engrafted islets by intravenous injection of alloxan (75 mg/kg body weight).
        • Wait for 24 h for alloxan to induce beta-cell death.
      • ii Measure blood glucose levels 24 h after the administration of alloxan to confirm that the mouse has been rendered hyperglycemic.
      • iii Inject 0.1 ml of annexin V-APC intravenously via the tail vein.
        • Wait for 4-6 h for annexin V APC to label apoptotic and dead cells.
      • iv Image beta-cell death in the engrafted islets between 4-6 h following the administration of annexin V-APC, using appropriate settings for APC fluorescence. Excite APC at 633 nm with collection of emission light between 645-680 nm.
  • (D) Imaging of Cytoplasmic Free Ca2+ Concentration after Loading the Graft with Ca2+ indicators via perfusion of the anterior chamber of the eye.
  • Anterior chamber perfusion is modified from ref. 18.
      • i Pull pipettes for the anterior chamber of the eye perfusion from glass capillaries using a regular pulling program for patch pipettes. Break the pipette to a tip diameter of 30-40 μm. Bevel the tips at an angle of 35 degrees to a final diameter of 70-90 μm. Pipettes for the outflow should be slightly bigger (˜90 μm) than pipettes for the inflow (˜70 μm).
      • ii Fill the syringes, tubing and capillary holders with filtered extracellular solution and place the pipettes in the capillary grip head of the capillary holder.
      • iii Anesthetize the mouse by an intraperitoneal injection of 100 μl/10 g bodyweight of a Hypnorm/sterile water/Dormicum mix (1:2:1). Anesthesia will set in within 1-2 min. Prolong anesthesia by injections of 50 μl/10 g bodyweights of a Hypnorm/sterile water mix (1:3) after 30 and 60 min. If necessary further prolong anesthesia after 90 min by an injection of 50 μl/10 g bodyweight of the initial Hypnorm/sterile water/Dormicum mix (1:2:1).
        • Care is taken in choosing an anesthetic for functional studies on islet cells, as several compounds have been reported to exert an effect on blood glucose levels and insulin secretion19,20. Isoflurane has been shown to inhibit glucose stimulated insulin release by a direct mechanism on islet cells and therefore is not suitable for functional studies21. A mix of Hypnorm/Dormicum does not seem to interfere with the measurements of changes in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration.
      • iv Put the mouse in the head holder and fix the head with the eye containing the transplanted islets facing upwards.
      • v Carefully pull back the eyelids and gently place the polyethylene tubing loop of the eye stabilizer below the corneoscleral junction and place holder and mouse under the upright microscope.
        • Care is taken when placing the stabilizing forceps not to disrupt blood circulation in the eye.
      • vi Hang the open reservoir of the outflow at a height of ˜21 cm above the eye to ensure a constant intraocular pressure of ˜15 mm Hg. Place the capillary holder of the outflow in the micromanipulator.
      • vii Employ a 2.5× objective while inserting the outflow pipette into the anterior chamber with the micromanipulator to observe the entire eye.
        • Penetrate the anterior chamber by moving the pipette fast through the cornea at a shallow angle. Be careful not to unnecessarily scratch the cornea or to damage the iris.
      • viii Aspirate ˜130 μl of the Fluo-4/Fura-Red mix (1:1, 500 μM each) into the inflow capillary and fix the capillary holder onto the micromanipulator. Make sure that there is enough dye-free extracellular solution in the syringe for wash out. Place the 1 ml syringe of the inflow into the syringe pump.
      • ix Insert the inflow pipette into the anterior chamber opposite to the outflow pipette. Penetrate the cornea in the same way as in step vii.
      • x Initially, exchange the aqueous humor with the perfusate fast (˜10 μl in 30 s). Observe functionality of the perfusion.
      • xi Continuously perfuse the anterior chamber of the eye at a rate of ˜3 μl/min for ˜40 min.
      • xii After loading, wash out the dye in the anterior chamber by perfusing the anterior chamber at a fast rate (˜10 μl/min).
        • During perfusion steps, control the perfusion and the eye. Pay attention that the eye is not swelling due to a blocked outflow.
      • xiii After wash out of the dye switch off the perfusion. Do not remove the pipettes.
      • xiv For imaging of changes in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration switch to a higher magnification water immersion dipping objective (10, 20 or 40×) and apply Viscotears as immersion liquid.
      • xv Simultaneously image Fluo-4 and Fura-Red to enable ratiometric measurements of changes in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration. Excite Fluo-4 and Fura-Red at 488 nm and collect emission light for Fluo-4 between 495-535 nm and for Fura-Red between 600-700 nm.
        • Apply the minimum required laser-power and scan-time necessary for visualization to avoid photodamage and bleaching; for example, below 75 mW, and from 800 Hz and above
      • xvi Start acquiring a time series of the Fluo-4 and Fura-Red fluorescence in the cells of interest.
      • xvii Acquire a baseline of unstimulated fluorescence levels and stimulate systemic insulin release by injecting glibenclamide (1 mg/kg) intravenously via the tail vein. Changes in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration in beta-cells within the islet graft should be observed within seconds after injection.
      • xviii After imaging remove the pipettes carefully from the eye.
      • xix To relieve post-operative pain inject the mouse subcutaneously with butrenorphine (0.05 mg/kg).
      • xx Place the mouse in a warm environment (˜30° C.) until it wakes up. After Hypnorm/Dormicum anesthesia this can take several hours.
    Timing
  • Isolation of islets (step 1): ˜4 h
  • Transplantation of islets to the anterior chamber (steps 2-5): ˜25 min/mouse
  • Imaging of graft morphology (step 13 A): ˜1 h/mouse
  • Imaging of graft vascularization (steps 13 B, i-ii or iii-iv): ˜1 h/mouse
  • Imaging of beta-cell death (steps 13 C i-ii): ˜24 h; (step 13 C iii-iv): ˜5 h
  • Imaging of cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration after loading the graft with Ca2+ indicators via perfusion of the anterior chamber of the eye (step 13 D i): ˜1.5 h/4-6 pipettes; (steps 13 D ii-xx): ˜2 h/mouse
  • Anticipated Results
  • The here introduced platform enables longitudinal assessment of several biological parameters in vivo without the need of invasive surgical procedures to access the tissue of interest. Following transplantation of pancreatic islets of Langerhans to the anterior chamber of the eye, the current protocol easily enables detection of islet graft morphology by reflection or fluorescence imaging. Morphological characterization of a pancreatic islet graft by imaging reflection and GFP was carried out in which. islets of mice expressing GFP under the insulin promoter (green beta-cells) were transplanted to mice expressing GFP under the Tie2 promoter (green endothelial cells). GFP was excited with 488 nm at 35% laser power and emission measured between 495-530 nm. Reflection was imaged by exciting with 633 nm at 35% laser power and measuring emission between 632-639 nm.
  • Furthermore, vascularization and cell death can be followed longitudinally by systemic injections of fluorescent dyes. Blood vessels were visualized by an intravenous injection of a 70 kDa Texas Red labeled dextran. GFP and Texas Red were excited with a two-photon laser at 890 nm at minimal necessary laser power required and emission collected onto non-descanned detectors using a dichroic mirror (RSP 560) and emission filters (BP 525/50 and BP 640/20). For imaging of cell death, beta-cell death was induced by intravenous injection of alloxan. Apoptotic and dead cells were visualized by intravenous injection of annexin V-APC. Reflection was imaged by exciting with 543 nm and emission measured between 539-547 nm at 35% laser power. GFP was excited at 488 nm and emission measured between 495-530 nm at 35% laser power. APC was excited at 633 nm with collection of emission light between 645-680 nm at 75% laser power.
  • Additionally, islet-cells can be loaded repetitively with Ca2+ indicators, by perfusion of the anterior chamber, to measure systemically induced changes in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration. For loading with calcium indicators, the anterior chamber was perfused with Fluo-4 and Fura-Red. Fluo-4 and Fura-Red were excited with 488 nm at 25% laser power and emission measured for Fluo-4 between 495-535 nm and for Fura-Red between 600-700 nm. Reflection was imaged by exciting with 543 nm and emission measured between 539-547 nm at 15% laser power.
  • Extending the current protocol by the use of various transgenic mice and indicators will enable the observation of numerous additional biological parameters. Thereby, this platform will help to investigate cell biology of complex systems under physiological as well as pathophysiological conditions.
  • EXAMPLE 2 REFERENCES
    • 1. Koo, V., Hamilton, P. W. & Williamson, K. Non-invasive in vivo imaging in small animal research. Cell Oncol 28, 127-139 (2006).
    • 2. Handbook of biological confocal microscopy, Edn. 3 (Pawley, J. B.) (Springer, New York, N.Y., 2005).
    • 3. Adeghate, E., Ponery, A. S., Ahmed, I. & Donath, T. Comparative morphology and biochemistry of pancreatic tissue fragments transplanted into the anterior eye chamber and subcutaneous regions of the rat. European journal of morphology 39, 257-268 (2001).
    • 4. Katoh, N., et al. Target-specific innervation by autonomic and sensory nerve fibers in hairy fetal skin transplanted into the anterior eye chamber of adult rat. Cell and tissue research 266, 259-263 (1991).
    • 5. Olson, L. & Seiger, A. Beating intraocular hearts: light-controlled rate by autonomic innervation from host iris. Journal of neurobiology 7, 193-203 (1976).
    • 6. Wu, W., Scott, D. E. & Reiter, R. J. Transplantation of the mammalian pineal gland: studies of survival, revascularization, reinnervation, and recovery of function. Experimental neurology 122, 88-99 (1993).
    • 7. Hoffer, B., Seiger, A., Ljungberg, T. & Olson, L. Electrophysiological and cytological studies of brain homografts in the anterior chamber of the eye: maturation of cerebellar cortex in oculo. Brain research 79, 165-184 (1974).
    • 8. Niederkorn, J. Y. Immune privilege in the anterior chamber of the eye. Critical reviews in immunology 22, 13-46 (2002).
    • 9. Adeghate, E. Pancreatic tissue grafts are reinnervated by neuro-peptidergic and cholinergic nerves within five days of transplantation. Transplant immunology 10, 73-80 (2002).
    • 10. Adeghate, E. Host-graft circulation and vascular morphology in pancreatic tissue transplants in rats. The Anatomical record 251, 448-459 (1998).
    • 12. Zhuravleva, Z. N., Bragin, A. G. & Vinogradova, O. S. Organization of the nervous tissue (hippocampus and septum) developing in the anterior eye chamber. I. General characteristic and non-neural elements. Journal fur Hirnforschung 25, 313-330 (1984).
    • 13. Adeghate, E. & Donath, T. Distribution of neuropeptide Y and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide immunoreactive nerves in normal and transplanted pancreatic tissue. Peptides 11, 1087-1092 (1990).
    • 14. Boutet de Monvel, J., Le Calvez, S. & Ulfendahl, M. Image restoration for confocal microscopy: improving the limits of deconvolution, with application to the visualization of the mammalian hearing organ. Biophysical journal 80, 2455-2470 (2001).
    • 15. Kohler, M., et al. On-line monitoring of apoptosis in insulin-secreting cells. Diabetes 52, 2943-2950 (2003).
    • 16. Berney, T., et al. Endotoxin-mediated delayed islet graft function is associated with increased intra-islet cytokine production and islet cell apoptosis. Transplantation 71, 125-132 (2001).
    • 17. Nyqvist, D., Köhler, M., Wahlstedt, H. & Berggren, P. O. Donor islet endothelial cells participate in formation of functional vessels within pancreatic islet grafts. Diabetes 54, 2287-2293 (2005).
    • 18. Bernd, A. S., Aihara, M., Lindsey, J. D. & Weinreb, R. N. Influence of molecular weight on intracameral dextran movement to the posterior segment of the mouse eye. Investigative ophthalmology & visual science 45, 480-484 (2004).
    • 19. Aynsley-Green, A., Biebuyck, J. F. & Alberti, K. G. Anaesthesia and insulin secretion: the effects of diethyl ether, halothane, pentobarbitone sodium and ketamine hydrochloride on intravenous glucose tolerance and insulin secretion in the rat. Diabetologia 9, 274-281 (1973).
    • 20. Brown, E. T., Umino, Y., Loi, T., Solessio, E. & Barlow, R. Anesthesia can cause sustained hyperglycemia in C57/BL6J mice. Visual neuroscience 22, 615-618 (2005).
    • 21. Desborough, J. P., Jones, P. M., Persaud, S. J., Landon, M. J. & Howell, S. L. Isoflurane inhibits insulin secretion from isolated rat pancreatic islets of Langerhans. British journal of anaesthesia 71, 873-876 (1993).
    Troubleshooting
  • TABLE 1
    PROBLEM POSSIBLE REASON SOLUTION
    Movement of the graft during Movement of the head because Fix the clamping of the head
    imaging (Step 12). the head holder is not properly holder.
    fixed.
    Movement of the eye during Adjust the eye stabilizer
    normal breathing. carefully.
    Gasping of the mouse. Make sure that the airflow of the
    anesthesia unit and isofluorane
    levels are set properly.
    No fluorescence can be Tail vein injection failed. Repeat tail vein injection.
    detected in the blood vessels Excitation and emission settings Adjust excitation and emission
    (Step 13 B ii). are wrong. settings.
    Blood circulation to the eye is Adjust the position of the eye
    disrupted due to false setting of stabilizer.
    eye stabilizer.
    Perfusion does not work Air bubbles block the pipettes, Make sure that there are no air
    (Step 13 D x). capillary holder or tubing. bubbles in the tubing, capillary
    holders or capillaries, prior to
    the experiment.
    Dirt blocks the pipette tips. Be sure to clean the pipettes
    after beveling, right before the
    experiment.

Claims (9)

1. A method for drug development comprising
(a) engrafting target cells into the eye of a test animal, wherein one or more cellular component of therapeutic interest in the transplanted target cells are fluorescently labeled;
(b) contacting the target cells with one or more test compounds; and
(c) performing non-invasive fluorescent imaging on the eye of the test animal,
wherein the fluorescent imaging is used to detect test compound-induced changes in one or more of activity, location, and amount of the fluorescently labeled cellular components of therapeutic interest in the engrafted target cells, wherein the changes identify those test compounds that may provide a therapeutic benefit to the target cells.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the target cells are derived from tissue selected from the group consisting of endocrine, fat, muscle, brain, liver, heart, kidney, and lung.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the target cells are transplanted into the anterior chamber of the eye of the test animal.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the one or more test compounds are applied topically onto the eye of the test animal.
5. The method of claim 1 wherein the one or more test compounds are injected into the anterior chamber of the eye of the test animal.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the fluorescent imaging comprises laser-scanning microscopy.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the fluorescent imaging is used to detect test compound-induced changes in one or more of activity, location, and amount of the fluorescently labeled cellular components of therapeutic interest in the engrafted target cells at multiple time points.
8. The method of claim 1 wherein the target cells comprise pancreatic beta cells.
9. A method for treating a subject with type I diabetes, comprising transplanting into the eye of a subject with type I diabetes an amount effective of an insulin-producing cell to promote insulin production in the subject.
US12/199,473 2007-08-31 2008-08-27 Non-Invasive In Vivo Imaging and Methods for Treating Type I Diabetes Abandoned US20090060843A1 (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/199,473 US20090060843A1 (en) 2007-08-31 2008-08-27 Non-Invasive In Vivo Imaging and Methods for Treating Type I Diabetes
US14/515,000 US9463205B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2014-10-15 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes
US15/265,212 US10207012B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2016-09-14 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes
US16/181,853 US10493108B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2018-11-06 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating diabetes
US16/669,840 US20200061121A1 (en) 2007-08-31 2019-10-31 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US96943707P 2007-08-31 2007-08-31
US98903807P 2007-11-19 2007-11-19
US4248208P 2008-04-04 2008-04-04
US12/199,473 US20090060843A1 (en) 2007-08-31 2008-08-27 Non-Invasive In Vivo Imaging and Methods for Treating Type I Diabetes

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/515,000 Division US9463205B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2014-10-15 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20090060843A1 true US20090060843A1 (en) 2009-03-05

Family

ID=40025468

Family Applications (5)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/199,473 Abandoned US20090060843A1 (en) 2007-08-31 2008-08-27 Non-Invasive In Vivo Imaging and Methods for Treating Type I Diabetes
US14/515,000 Active US9463205B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2014-10-15 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes
US15/265,212 Active US10207012B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2016-09-14 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes
US16/181,853 Active US10493108B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2018-11-06 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating diabetes
US16/669,840 Abandoned US20200061121A1 (en) 2007-08-31 2019-10-31 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes

Family Applications After (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/515,000 Active US9463205B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2014-10-15 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes
US15/265,212 Active US10207012B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2016-09-14 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes
US16/181,853 Active US10493108B2 (en) 2007-08-31 2018-11-06 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating diabetes
US16/669,840 Abandoned US20200061121A1 (en) 2007-08-31 2019-10-31 Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating type I diabetes

Country Status (8)

Country Link
US (5) US20090060843A1 (en)
EP (2) EP2194993B1 (en)
JP (4) JP5883221B2 (en)
DK (2) DK2194993T3 (en)
ES (2) ES2447069T3 (en)
HK (1) HK1144252A1 (en)
PL (2) PL2441462T3 (en)
WO (1) WO2009027106A2 (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2011034590A1 (en) * 2009-09-18 2011-03-24 Caliper Life Sciences Compositions and methods for in vivo evaluation of bioluminescence
WO2012051118A1 (en) * 2010-10-12 2012-04-19 University Of Miami Islet storing intraocular implant, method of using the same and kit including the same
WO2012158487A1 (en) 2011-05-13 2012-11-22 Biocrine Ab System and methods for motorized injection and aspiration
US8557513B2 (en) 2011-06-27 2013-10-15 Biocrine Ab Methods for treating and/or limiting development of diabetes
WO2014016400A1 (en) 2012-07-27 2014-01-30 Per-Olof Berggren Methods for monitoring physiological status of a body organ

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20090060843A1 (en) * 2007-08-31 2009-03-05 Biocrine Ab Non-Invasive In Vivo Imaging and Methods for Treating Type I Diabetes
JP6161845B1 (en) * 2016-11-14 2017-07-12 英次 湊 Eyelash hair thickening device, eyelash hair thickening method, eyelash hair thickening device, and eyelash hair thickening method
JP2021530476A (en) 2018-07-19 2021-11-11 バイオクライン アーベーBiocrine Ab Methods and Reagents for Treating Diabetes
WO2021155025A1 (en) * 2020-01-28 2021-08-05 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Preventing or treating pancreatic dysfunction or diabetes by upregulating human cathelicidin

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5650135A (en) * 1994-07-01 1997-07-22 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Non-invasive localization of a light-emitting conjugate in a mammal
US5650435A (en) * 1991-04-01 1997-07-22 Madara; James L. Modulation of inflammation related to columnar epithelia
US20040197792A1 (en) * 2002-07-15 2004-10-07 Sugen, Inc. Novel Kinases
US20050180959A1 (en) * 2002-02-06 2005-08-18 Karsten Eulenberg Kinases involved in the regulation of energy homeostasis
US7198774B2 (en) * 1994-07-01 2007-04-03 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Non-invasive localization of a light-emitting conjugate in a mammal

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
SU1369039A1 (en) * 1982-07-16 1988-09-07 Институт биологической физики АН СССР Method of simulating compensation of diabetes
DE19703734A1 (en) * 1997-01-31 1998-08-06 Univ Magdeburg Tech Apparatus for non-invasive examination of eye cells
KR19990014353A (en) * 1998-10-17 1999-02-25 윤태욱 Mass Culture Proliferation of Pancreatic Islets
ATE421589T1 (en) * 2000-03-17 2009-02-15 Anticancer Inc OPTICAL IMAGING SYSTEM FOR DISPLAYING GENE EXPRESSION OF THE ENTIRE BODY AND APPLICATIONS
CN101282652B (en) * 2005-06-02 2013-09-11 亚利桑那董事会(代表亚利桑那大学) Prevascularized devices and related methods
US20090060843A1 (en) * 2007-08-31 2009-03-05 Biocrine Ab Non-Invasive In Vivo Imaging and Methods for Treating Type I Diabetes

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5650435A (en) * 1991-04-01 1997-07-22 Madara; James L. Modulation of inflammation related to columnar epithelia
US5650135A (en) * 1994-07-01 1997-07-22 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Non-invasive localization of a light-emitting conjugate in a mammal
US7198774B2 (en) * 1994-07-01 2007-04-03 The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University Non-invasive localization of a light-emitting conjugate in a mammal
US20050180959A1 (en) * 2002-02-06 2005-08-18 Karsten Eulenberg Kinases involved in the regulation of energy homeostasis
US20040197792A1 (en) * 2002-07-15 2004-10-07 Sugen, Inc. Novel Kinases

Non-Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Adeghate (2002) Transplant Immunology, Vol. 10, 73-80 *
Nyqvist (2007) Thesis "In vivo imaging of islet cells and islet revascularization" Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden *
Shitara et al. (2001) FEBS Lett., Vol. 500(1-2), 7-11. *
Urtti (2006) Adv. Drug Deliv. Rev., Vol. 58, 1131-1135 *

Cited By (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2011034590A1 (en) * 2009-09-18 2011-03-24 Caliper Life Sciences Compositions and methods for in vivo evaluation of bioluminescence
US20110182823A1 (en) * 2009-09-18 2011-07-28 Stephen Oldfield Compositions and methods for in vivo evaluation of bioluminescence
CN102575282A (en) * 2009-09-18 2012-07-11 卡钳生命科学公司 Compositions and methods for in vivo evaluation of bioluminescence
US9486542B2 (en) 2009-09-18 2016-11-08 Caliper Life Sciences Compositions and methods for in vivo evaluation of bioluminescence
WO2012051118A1 (en) * 2010-10-12 2012-04-19 University Of Miami Islet storing intraocular implant, method of using the same and kit including the same
US20130226292A1 (en) * 2010-10-12 2013-08-29 Jean-Marie Parel Islet storing intraocular implant, method of using the same and kit including the same
WO2012158487A1 (en) 2011-05-13 2012-11-22 Biocrine Ab System and methods for motorized injection and aspiration
US9744293B2 (en) 2011-05-13 2017-08-29 Midhat H. Abdulreda System and methods for motorized injection and aspiration
US9068973B2 (en) 2011-06-27 2015-06-30 Biocrine Ab Methods for treating and/or limiting development of diabetes
US9353183B2 (en) 2011-06-27 2016-05-31 Biocrine Ab Methods for treating and/or limiting development of diabetes
US8557513B2 (en) 2011-06-27 2013-10-15 Biocrine Ab Methods for treating and/or limiting development of diabetes
US9744232B2 (en) 2011-06-27 2017-08-29 Biocrine Ab Methods for treating and/or limiting development of diabetes
US10226530B2 (en) 2011-06-27 2019-03-12 Biocrine Ab Methods for treating and/or limiting development of diabetes
US9462973B2 (en) 2012-07-27 2016-10-11 Biocrine Ab Methods for monitoring physiological status of a body organ
WO2014016400A1 (en) 2012-07-27 2014-01-30 Per-Olof Berggren Methods for monitoring physiological status of a body organ
US9702867B2 (en) 2012-07-27 2017-07-11 Biocrine Ab Methods for monitoring physiological status of a body organ
US10228364B2 (en) 2012-07-27 2019-03-12 Biocrine Ab Methods for monitoring physiological status of a body organ
US10338060B2 (en) 2012-07-27 2019-07-02 Biocrine Ab Methods for monitoring physiological status of a body organ
US11519902B2 (en) 2012-07-27 2022-12-06 Biocrine Ab Methods for monitoring physiological status of a body organ

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP2441462B1 (en) 2019-05-08
PL2194993T3 (en) 2014-04-30
US20170000907A1 (en) 2017-01-05
WO2009027106A3 (en) 2009-07-23
US10207012B2 (en) 2019-02-19
EP2194993A2 (en) 2010-06-16
JP2011256202A (en) 2011-12-22
JP5882640B2 (en) 2016-03-09
ES2732561T3 (en) 2019-11-25
JP2014167023A (en) 2014-09-11
JP2010536908A (en) 2010-12-02
US20200061121A1 (en) 2020-02-27
PL2441462T3 (en) 2020-01-31
US9463205B2 (en) 2016-10-11
US20190070316A1 (en) 2019-03-07
EP2194993B1 (en) 2013-12-18
ES2447069T3 (en) 2014-03-11
WO2009027106A2 (en) 2009-03-05
JP2016074726A (en) 2016-05-12
EP2441462A1 (en) 2012-04-18
HK1144252A1 (en) 2011-02-11
US20150064144A1 (en) 2015-03-05
DK2441462T3 (en) 2019-06-24
DK2194993T3 (en) 2014-01-27
JP5883221B2 (en) 2016-03-09
US10493108B2 (en) 2019-12-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US10493108B2 (en) Non-invasive in vivo imaging and methods for treating diabetes
Almaça et al. The pericyte of the pancreatic islet regulates capillary diameter and local blood flow
Speier et al. Noninvasive high-resolution in vivo imaging of cell biology in the anterior chamber of the mouse eye
JP2010536908A5 (en) Drug development method for type 1 diabetes
Springer et al. Closed-chest cell injections into mouse myocardium guided by high-resolution echocardiography
Diez et al. Pancreatic islet blood flow dynamics in primates
Tracy et al. Intravitreal implantation of TPP1-transduced stem cells delays retinal degeneration in canine CLN2 neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis
Haghayegh Jahromi et al. A novel cervical spinal cord window preparation allows for two-photon imaging of T-cell interactions with the cervical spinal cord microvasculature during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis
Yang et al. The eye as a novel imaging site in diabetes research
He et al. A versatile method for viral transfection of calcium indicators in the neonatal mouse brain
US20170276667A1 (en) Methods for monitoring physiological status of a body organ
Baffet et al. Cellular and subcellular imaging of motor protein-based behavior in embryonic rat brain
Wilson et al. Injection of hydrogel biomaterial scaffolds to The brain after stroke
Fang et al. Methods for Imaging Inflammation and Transendothelial Migration in Vivo and ex Vivo
Zhong et al. Intravital Imaging of Fluorescent Protein Expression in Mice with a Closed-Skull Traumatic Brain Injury and Cranial Window Using a Two-Photon Microscope
KR20160115522A (en) Producing method of rheumatoid arthritis animal model, AbartaRA, via transplanting rheumatoid arthritis synovium
Kim et al. Cerebellar Bergmann Glia Integrating Noxious Information Modulate Nocifensive Behaviors
Yang et al. The anterior chamber of the eye technology and its anatomical, optical and immunological bases
Vallieres et al. Neda Haghayegh Jahromi1, Heidi Tardent1, Gaby Enzmann1, Urban Deutsch1, Naoto Kawakami2, 3, Stefan Bittner4, Dietmar Vestweber5, Frauke Zipp4, Jens V. Stein1 and Britta Engelhardt1
JPWO2019026903A1 (en) Short-term tumorigenicity screening system
Singh et al. Confocal Imaging of Intracellular calcium Cycling in the Intact Heart
Abdulredaa et al. Noninvasive in vivo model demonstrating the effects of autonomic innervation on pancreatic islet function
Valentino et al. Two-photon microscopy: sequential imaging studies in vivo
Valentino et al. Hypoglycemia causes widespread white matter injury–an imaging study in transgenic mice

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: BIOCRINE AB, JOHN ERIKSSONSGATAN 9, 112 22 STOCKHO

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:BERGGREN, PER OLOF;CAICEDO, ALEJANDRO;REEL/FRAME:021766/0041;SIGNING DATES FROM 20080919 TO 20080926

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- AFTER EXAMINER'S ANSWER OR BOARD OF APPEALS DECISION