Background: Islets are susceptible to damage by proinflammatory cytokines via activation of transcription factor NF-κB. We hypothesized that inhibition of NF-κB activity will decrease cytokine-mediated β-cell injury and improve islet transplant functional outcome.
Methods: We created a transgenic mouse expressing a degradation resistant N-terminally deleted IκBα (ΔNIκBα) under the control of a commercially available tetracycline-controlled transcriptional activation system using a rat insulin promoter. Isolated islets from transgenic and control mouse strains were exposed to cytokines in vitro and assayed or transplanted.
Results: Western blot analysis showed that ΔNIκBα was significantly increased with doxycycline treatment. Cytokine-induced NF-κB activation was significantly decreased in transgenic (0.065 ± 0.013 absorbance value/μg protein) vs control islets (0.128 ± 0.006; P < .05). Suppression of cytokine-mediated NF-κB activity decreased expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, and interferon-γ inducible protein-10 RNA transcripts, and significantly decreased nitric oxide production in transgenic islets (0.084 ± 0.043 μM/μg protein) vs. controls (0.594 ± 0.174; P < .01). The insulin stimulation index in islets exposed to cytokines was higher in transgenic vs controls (1.500 ± 0.106 vs 0.800 ± 0.098; P < .01). Syngeneic transplants of a marginal mass of intraportally infused transgenic islets resulted in a reversion to euglycemia in 69.2% of diabetic recipients at a mean of 7.8 ± 1.1 days vs. 35.7% of control islet recipients reverting at a mean of 15.8 ± 2.9 days (P < .05).
Conclusion: Conditional and specific suppression of NF-κB activity in β cells protected islets from cytokine-induced dysfunction in vitro and in vivo. These results provide a proof of principle that inhibition of NF-κB activity in donor islets enhances function and improves the outcome of islet transplantation.
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