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Noninvasive quantitative evaluation of viable islet grafts using <sup>111</sup> In-exendin-4 SPECT/CT.

FASEB J · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study on mice, researchers tested a new imaging method using a radioactive probe called ¹¹¹In-exendin-4 to detect and measure islet grafts—cells transplanted to treat type 1 diabetes—after they were placed in the liver. The probe’s uptake in the liver matched the number of islets transplanted (150 or 400) and aligned with better blood sugar control and higher insulin levels in the liver. The imaging technique, called SPECT/CT, successfully visualized the grafts in the liver and matched results from tissue analysis.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalFASEB J, 2023
Citations3
Relative citation ratio0.47
NIH percentile27
Molecules

Abstract

Islet transplantation (IT) is an effective β-cell replacement therapy for patients with type 1 diabetes; however, the lack of methods to detect islet grafts and evaluate their β-cell mass (BCM) has limited the further optimization of IT protocols. Therefore, the development of noninvasive β-cell imaging is required. In this study, we investigated the utility of the Indium-labeled exendin-4 probe {[Lys12(111In-BnDTPA-Ahx)] exendin-4} ( In exendin-4) to evaluate islet graft BCM after intraportal IT. The probe was cultured with various numbers of isolated islets. Streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice were intraportally transplanted with 150 or 400 syngeneic islets. After a 6-week observation following IT, the ex-vivo liver graft uptake of In-exendin-4 was compared with the liver insulin content. In addition, the in-vivo liver graft uptake of In exendin-4 using SPECT/CT was compared with that of liver graft BCM measured by a histological method. As a result, probe accumulation was significantly correlated with islet numbers. The ex-vivo liver graft uptake in the 400-islet-transplanted group was significantly higher than that in the control and the 150-islet-transplanted groups, consistent with glycemic control and liver insulin content. In conclusion, in-vivo SPECT/CT displayed liver islet grafts, and uptakes were corroborated by histological liver BCM. In-exendin-4 SPECT/CT can be used to visualize and evaluate liver islet grafts noninvasively after intraportal IT.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 36906290 ↗