Elsevier

Molecular Metabolism

Volume 6, Issue 9, September 2017, Pages 1002-1009
Molecular Metabolism

Review
Intraocular in vivo imaging of pancreatic islet cell physiology/pathology

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2017.03.014Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

Background

Diabetes mellitus has reached epidemic proportions and requires new strategies for treatment. Unfortunately, the efficacy of treatment regimens on maintaining/re-gaining functional beta cell mass can, at the present, only be determined indirectly. Direct monitoring of beta cell mass is complicated by the anatomy of the endocrine pancreas, which consists of thousands to a million of discrete micro-organs, i.e. islets of Langerhans, which are scattered throughout the pancreas.

Scope of review

Here, we review the progress made over the last years using the anterior chamber of the eye as a transplantation site for functional imaging of pancreatic islet cells in the living organism. Islets engrafted on the iris are vascularized and innervated and the cornea, serving as a natural body-window, allows for microscopic, non-invasive, longitudinal evaluation of islet/beta cell function and survival with single-cell resolution in health and disease.

Major conclusions

Data provided by us and others demonstrate the high versatility of this imaging platform. The use of ‘reporter islets’ engrafted in the eye, reporting on the status of in situ endogenous islets in the pancreas of the same animal, allows the identification of key-events in the development and progression of diabetes. This will not only serve as a versatile research tool but will also lay the foundation for a personalized medicine approach and will serve as a screening platform for new drugs and/or treatment protocols. ‘Metabolic’ islet transplantation, in which islets engrafted in the eye replace the endogenous beta cells, will allow for the establishment of islet-specific transgenic models and ‘humanized’ mouse models as well as serving as the basis for a new clinical transplantation site for the cure of diabetes.

Keywords

Diabetes mellitus
Type 1 diabetes
Type 2 diabetes
Pancreatic islet
Pancreatic beta cell
Live-cell imaging
Fluorescence microscopy
In vivo imaging
Anterior chamber of the eye

Cited by (0)