Abstract
Despite improvements in outcomes for human islet transplantation, characterization of islet preparations remains poorly defined. This study used both light microscopy (LM) and electron microscopy (EM) to characterize 33 islet preparations used for clinical transplants. EM allowed an accurate identification and quantification of cell types with measured cell number fractions (mean±s.e.m.) of 35.6±2.1% β-cells, 12.6±1.0% non-β-islet cells (48.3±2.6% total islet cells), 22.7±1.5% duct cells, and 25.3±1.8% acinar cells. Of the islet cells, 73.6±1.7% were β-cells. For comparison with the literature, estimates of cell number fraction, cell volume, and extracellular volume were combined to convert number fraction data to volume fractions applicable to cells, islets, and the entire preparation. The mathematical framework for this conversion was developed. By volume, β-cells were 86.5±1.1% of the total islet cell volume and 61.2±0.8% of intact islets (including the extracellular volume), which is similar to that of islets in the pancreas. Our estimates produced 1560±20 cells in an islet equivalent (volume of 150-μm diameter sphere), of which 1140±15 were β-cells. To test whether LM analysis of the same tissue samples could provide reasonable estimates of purity of the islet preparations, volume fraction of the islet tissue was measured on thin sections available from 27 of the clinical preparations by point counting morphometrics. Islet purity (islet volume fraction) of individual preparations determined by LM and EM analyses correlated linearly with excellent agreement (R2=0.95). However, islet purity by conventional dithizone staining was substantially higher with a 20–30% overestimation. Thus, both EM and LM provide accurate methods to determine the cell composition of human islet preparations and can help us understand many of the discrepancies of islet composition in the literature.
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In spite of important recent progress with islet transplantation in the past decade, recipients typically lose islet function over months to a few years.1, 2 There are still many questions about the exact characteristics of islet preparations that are transplanted, including critical parameters, such as β-cell mass and viability. Isolation of human islets has always presented a challenge, in part because, unlike other species from which islets can be isolated with little contamination by other pancreatic cells, human islet preparations typically consist of ∼50% non-islet elements, mainly acinar and duct cells.3, 4, 5, 6
The correlation of clinical outcome with characteristics of human islet preparations would benefit by having accurate measurements of cell composition and islet volume fraction (purity) of the transplanted material. Cell composition of human islets within the pancreas has been examined in a number of studies.7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 Measurements have been made with isolated islets that were cultured under conditions favoring β-cell enrichment,5 shipped,16 or after dissociation into single cells3, 17 with inconsistent results. No measurements with freshly isolated islets have been reported. The volume fraction of islets is routinely measured by staining with dithizone (diphenylthiocarbazone, DTZ) and examining by light microscopy (LM)18 to visually estimate the volume fraction of tissue stained red. The method is operator dependent and usually overestimates islet purity.3 There is a need for development and standardization of assays to facilitate quantitative data analysis of cell composition and islet purity, as well as to permit comparison of results from multiple transplant centers.
In this study, we used morphological analysis with electron microscopy (EM) of islet preparations and found it to be a valuable tool for assessing the cellular composition of clinical islet preparations. These data, together with estimates of cell size and extracellular volume, provided a means to calculate the islet volume fraction in the preparation. We also verified that LM assessment of volume fraction of islets by stereological point counting on 1-μm-thick sections agreed with the more rigorous and labor-intensive assessment by EM. Thus, islet purity can be estimated accurately by LM and, with further refinement, may be possible within hours of isolation using frozen sections. These methods should be useful in the development of the much-needed standardized characterization of islets before transplantation.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Islet Isolation Method
The cadaver pancreases were obtained from brain-dead donors by the New England Organ Bank after obtaining informed consent from donor relatives. Donor characteristics are described in Table 1. Islets obtained from the 33 pancreases were used for clinical transplants. Pancreases were preserved using the University of Wisconsin solution (Barr Pharmaceuticals, Pomona, NY, USA); five were preserved using the two-layer perfluorocarbon (PFC) method.19 Only pancreases with cold ischemia times ≤12 h (without PFC) or <18 h with PFC preservation were processed for transplantation. Islets were isolated by the Islet Resource Center at the Joslin Diabetes Center using the standard collagenase/protease digestion method.20, 21 The pancreatic duct was cannulated and distended with 4°C collagenase/protease solution using Liberase HI (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN, USA).22 Islets were separated from the exocrine tissue using continuous density-gradient centrifugation in a COBE 2991 cell processor (Gambro BCT, Lakewood, CO, USA). Islet purity in each fraction was estimated with representative aliquots stained with DTZ, and the packed cell volume of each fraction was determined. Fractions containing islets with a total packed cell volume of <5 ml were combined and resuspended in a final wash medium (CMRL, Mediatech, Herndon, VA, USA) to a total volume of 255 ml in a 250 ml tube. The tube was centrifuged (Model RC 3C Plus, Sorvall, Ashville, NC, USA) at 920 r.p.m. (248 g) for 1 min at 4°C. The supernatant medium was aspirated carefully to the pellet surface. A 9.0 ml volume of the final wash medium was added to the pellet, which was resuspended by mixing without inclusion of bubbles and then carefully aspirated into a 10 ml pipette (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA, USA). The packed cell volume was determined as the difference between the final volume in the pipette minus 9.0 ml. The mixture in the pipette was returned to a 250 ml tube, brought to 255 ml with the final wash medium, and the cellular aggregates were kept in suspension by repeated inversion of the tube. Aliquots were taken for vital staining, DNA content, membrane integrity, purity and islet enumeration by DTZ staining, and morphological analysis.
Morphological Analysis
A 0.5 ml aliquot from the final islet preparation was fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, osmicated, divided into two samples, and embedded in plastic (Araldite) in the Joslin Advanced Microscopy Core. Thin (1 μm) sections were stained with toluidine blue for initial evaluation of purity and quality of islets. Secretory granules of islet endocrine cells were too small to be seen with LM, but the zymogen granules of acinar cells were very evident (Figure 1), which allowed acinar contamination to be easily identified. Ultrathin sections to be taken to EM were cut from the same blocks. A total of 16 micrographs per sample were taken systematically to cover the section, using × 1900 magnification to yield a total of 32 micrographs per islet preparation. A magnification of × 1900 provided adequate sampling with a minimum of 500 cells; with photographic printing (final magnification × 4375), the granule morphology of cells could be distinguished on the micrographs. Cell boundaries on each micrograph were determined to indicate the number of cells; then each cell was assigned to a category of β-, non-β-endocrine, acinar, or ductal cells. Acinar cells, islet cells (β-cells and non-β cells, such as α, δ, and PP), and duct cells could be definitively identified, and thus, cell composition determined (Figure 2). Occasional dead cells or endothelial cells were also identified and characterized as ‘other.’ The resulting cell composition was based on number, not volume, of cells counted from both samples and yielded the number fraction of each category. Islet volume fraction measurements by LM were made retrospectively on thin sections that were available for 27 of the 33 freshly isolated clinical preparations.
Cell Number Fraction by EM
Cell composition of an islet preparation was determined by counting the different cell types on electron micrographs. The number fraction of each cell type was calculated by dividing the number of each cell type by the total number of cells counted. In addition, the number fraction of all cells that were islet (β and non-β) cells and the number fraction of islet cells that were β-cells were also calculated (see Equations (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6) and (19) of the Appendix).
Islet Purity in a Preparation Determined by Three Methods
Volume fraction islets determined using cell number fraction, cell volume, and extracellular volume fraction
Number fraction data were converted to a volume fraction basis to compare with data obtained from other techniques and from the literature. The first step was conversion to cell volume fraction (based on the total volume of all cells) for each cell type and for islet and non-islet cells, as well as to the β-cell volume fraction based on the total volume of islet cells (see Equations (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), (12), (13), (14), (15), (16), (17), (18), (19), (20) of the Appendix). Equation (18) is the key relation for converting between islet cell number fraction and islet cell volume fraction. Estimates of volume per cell used in the calculations are given in Table 2. The second step was the calculation of volume fractions based on total tissue volume, including extracellular space (see Equations (21), (22), (23), (24), (25), (26), (27), (28), (29), (30), (31), (32), (33), (34) of the Appendix). It is important to appreciate that the volume fraction of the islet tissue (ie, the purity of the preparation) includes consideration of extracellular spaces, whereas the islet cell volume fraction does not. Equations (32), (34) and (35) are given in the Appendix for calculating the volume fraction of the islet tissue occupied by β-cells and the numbers of all cells and β-cells in an islet equivalent (IE, the volume of a sphere with a diameter of 150 μm).
Islet volume fraction by LM
The 1-μm-thick sections were analyzed at × 420 by stereological point counting,23 with a 90-point grid covering adjacent, nonoverlapping fields. The tissue type was determined (Figure 1) at each intercept point over the tissue. Freshly isolated islets had large dilated vascular spaces, and two approaches were explored to take this into account: (1) vascular space was included in the islet domain or (2) vascular space was analyzed separately (see Equations (37), (38), (39), (40) in Appendix). The second method was used because it was more reproducible. We counted a total of 500–800 points on one section for each preparation, which yielded a predicted s.e. equal to 3–5% of the mean for preparations of ∼50% islet purity.23
Islet volume fraction estimated with DTZ staining
DTZ (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) was used to discriminate the islet from the non-islet tissue by staining islet cells.18 DTZ was dissolved in dimethylsulfoxide (ICN Biomedicals, Costa Mesa, CA, USA) as a 10 × stock solution (2.5 mg/ml) and diluted with Hank's balanced salt solution (Mediatech) for the 1 × working solution. An aliquot of 250 μl from the final islet preparation was transferred into a 60-mm diameter Petri dish containing 3 ml of DTZ working solution and incubated with gentle swirling for 3 min. All tissues were examined with LM, and the volume fraction of the red-stained islet tissue was visually estimated.
Islet Enumeration by Conventional Counting with DTZ Staining
Two representative aliquots of 100 μl each from the final islet preparation were incubated with DTZ working solution as described for volume fraction determination by DTZ staining. Using a light microscope with a Bausch and Lomb micrometer disc (31-16-08) eyepiece reticle containing a grid of squares 50 μm on a side, the number of squares and the area occupied by each stained islet was determined, and the diameter of a circle having about the same surface area was estimated for each islet. Size distribution of the islets was quantified by two independent observers in 50 μm increments (ranges: 50–100, 100–150, 150–200, 200–250, 250–300, 300–350, and >350 μm). A formula was used to convert the number of islets in each 50 μm increment to a total islet volume by assuming that the islets are spherical.24 The number of IEs was calculated as the total islet volume divided by the volume of an IE (1.77 × 106 μm3).
Islet Vital Staining
A fluorescent dye inclusion/exclusion assay was used to assess membrane integrity. A 250 μl aliquot from the 255-ml islet preparation was resuspended in 5 ml of PBS solution in a 60-mm Petri dish, and 10 μl of a solution containing 9.9 mg/ml fluorescein diacetate and 0.5 mg/ml propidium iodide was added. Tissue was examined immediately. The volume fraction of cells containing nuclei-stained red was visually estimated with LM by focusing through the tissue.
Statistics
Data are reported as mean±s.e.m. Correlations were made with the Pearson product moment correlation coefficient. Statistical significance was assessed with the two-tailed Student's t-test.
RESULTS
Determination of Cell Composition and Number Fraction by EM
Different cell types within a preparation were definitively identified by their known ultrastructural characteristics (Figure 2). β-cells had distinctive granules with an electron-dense core containing insulin crystals surrounded by a lighter halo. In addition, human β-cells had characteristic lipid inclusions.25 Non-β-cells (α, δ, and PP) in islets had more homogenous granules without the crystalline structure and without the halos of β-cells. Although these three non-β-islet cells could be distinguished from one another by granule morphology, they were classified together as non-β-islet cells for quantitation. Acinar cells had easily identifiable large electron-dense zymogen granules and stacks of the endoplasmic reticulum. Duct cells were identified by their smaller size, shape, reduced ER, and lack of granules. In addition to these cell types, there were small numbers of endothelial cells, stromal cells, leukocytes, dead cells, and neuronal elements that together comprised <5% of the total cell population in these preparations; these are considered as ‘other’. When cell composition was based on number, rather than volume of cells, the number fraction of each cell type was the number of cells of a given type divided by the total number of cells (Table 3). The fraction of all islet cells that were β-cells (Equation(19)) was 73.6±1.7% with most of the values being close to this number; the coefficient of variation was only 0.13. However, there was a surprisingly low value of 41.0% (the only sample that contained significant islet amyloid, suggestive of a type 2 diabetic donor), which was an outlier; the next lowest value was 53.3%.
Cell Volume Fraction Determination
The cell number fraction data determined by EM (Table 3) and estimates of the volume of each cell type were used with Equations (7), (8), (9) and (13), (14), (15) of the Appendix to obtain the average cell volume for islet and non-islet cells and for the total of all cells. Over all preparations, the average volume was 805±9 μm3 and 679±19 μm3 for islet and non-islet cells, respectively (Table 4). The latter value reflects the mixture of large acinar cells and much smaller duct cells among non-islet cells. The ratio of the average cell volume for islet cells divided by the average cell volume for all cells averaged 1.09±0.01. These values and islet cell number fraction data, together with Equations (10), (11), (12) and (16), (17), (18), (19), (20) of the Appendix, were used to estimate cell volume fractions. The volume fraction of islet cells among all cells was 0.522±0.029. As β-cells are larger than islet non-β-cells, it is not surprising that the volume fraction of β-cells in islet cells was larger, ie, 0.865±0.011 (Table 4), than the number fraction, ie, 0.736±0.017 (Table 3).
Islet Volume Fraction Evaluated by Consideration of Extracellular Volume
It is important to make the distinction between the volume of cells in an islet and the total tissue volume of an islet; the latter includes extracellular volume, which results in a larger volume. To convert islet cell volume fraction estimates into islet tissue volume fraction estimates, which provide a measure of purity and a basis for comparison with our measurements using DTZ staining and with other values in the literature, extracellular volumes (both vascular channels and interstitial spaces) within the islet and non-islet tissue domains were accounted for by Equations (21), (22), (23), (24), (25), (26), (27), (28), (29), (30), (31), (32), (33) in the Appendix, and the results are summarized in Table 4. The volume of whole islets as a fraction of the total volume of the entire preparation was 0.551, whereas the volume of islet cells as a fraction of the total cell volume in the preparation was 0.522. The volume of β-cells as a fraction of the volume of islet tissue was 0.612±0.002.
Number of Islet Cells and β-Cells per IE
The number of islet cells and β-cells per IE, calculated with Equations (34) and (35), were 1560 (range 1430–1980 cells) and 1140, respectively (Table 4). The range reflected differences in β-cell to non-β-cell ratio in individual preparations. For example, the value 1980 islet cells came from the preparation with the fewest number of β-cells (41%), which means that the majority of cells were the smaller non-β-cells.
Estimation of the Islet and Non-Islet Tissues by LM
LM evaluation of toluidine blue-stained 1-μm plastic sections, generated in preparation for EM, provides information about islet purity and state of the tissue (Figure 1). To test whether LM analysis of the same sections could provide reasonable estimates of purity of the islet preparations, volume fraction of the islet tissue was measured on thin sections available from 27 of the clinical preparations by point counting morphometrics. At the LM level, the islet tissue was distinguished from the non-islet tissue (the exocrine or ganglia) by its cordlike pattern of cells often around vascular spaces, lack of visible granulation, and occasional visible small lipid droplets, whereas the exocrine tissue was in the form of either large sheets of simple columnar ductal epithelia or clumps of duct and acinar tissues (Figure 1 c, f and g). The acinar tissue initially was granulated with large stained granules; these were less pronounced after several days of culture. The small ducts were only faintly stained and surrounded by the acinar tissue. Notably, freshly isolated islets had large intra-islet vascular spaces, which resulted from the collapse of the capillary lumens and dilation of the resulting intra-islet vascular channels (Figure 1 a–c).
For LM analysis of the 1-μm-thick sections, the islet volume fraction exclusive of islet vascular spaces and the vascular void fraction were first analyzed separately according to Appendix Equations (38) and (39), respectively; the islet volume fraction, which included all components that comprised the islet tissue domains, was then calculated using Equation (40). Figure 3 shows the frequency distribution of the vascular void volume fraction in fresh islets that was obtained from this analysis. The vascular void volume fraction varied from 0.05 to 0.21 and averaged 0.14±0.01 for 27 clinical preparations. This was similar to the value of 0.14 measured on electron micrographs of rat islets fixed in situ.26 Although the transplanted islets were usually in culture for only a couple of hours, islets from other preparations were more compact with residual vascular spaces partially filled with perivascular (endothelial, macrophages, etc.) cells and dead endocrine cells after only 24 h in 37°C culture (Figure 1 d and e). In addition, some areas of necrosis could be discerned after 24 h in culture (Figure 1f). In contrast, the vascular volume in rat islets collapsed completely after 24 h of culture (data not shown). The collapse of the vascular channels contributes to the loss of islet mass often seen after islet culture.
Comparison of Islet Volume Fractions Determined by Three Methods
Transplanted human islet preparations are typically accompanied by many acinar and duct cells. Purity has traditionally been estimated by examination of preparations stained with DTZ, a technique that has the advantage of rapid assessment. However, the DTZ method produced erroneously high values (Figure 4) when compared with the more rigorous approach of the whole islet volume fraction based on EM determination of cell composition. The DTZ method produced an average value of 68±3%, whereas the whole islet volume fraction averaged 55.1±3% (Table 4). In only 3 of 33 cases was the DTZ estimate lower than that estimated from cell composition measurements using EM. The islet volume fraction data measured from LM were similar to those calculated from EM. The islet volume fraction by EM is plotted against the measured value from LM (Figure 5). All of the data are close to the line of identity for volume fraction by LM greater than ∼0.3. The data correlate linearly with R2=0.95 if all data are included or with R2=0.97 if the three preparations with low purity are excluded. These three preparations had a substantial fraction of islets that were embedded in the exocrine tissue, making it harder to identify and distinguish islet from the exocrine tissue. The islet volume fraction estimated by DTZ staining is plotted against that measured by LM in Figure 6. The data display an upward shift relative to the line of identity. For 24 out of the 27 batches, the estimate from DTZ staining is higher than that from LM, and the two data sets correlate poorly.
The frequency distributions of the islet volume fraction measured by EM, LM, and DTZ staining are shown in Figure 7. The islet volume fractions measured by EM follow a normal distribution. The mode of distribution corresponds to an islet volume fraction in the range 0.45–0.55. The mode is the same for islet volume fraction obtained by LM, but the data scattered about a normal distribution with more values at the lower end. The distribution of islet volume fractions measured by DTZ staining is skewed to the right with a mode in the range of 0.75–0.85.
Number fraction of cells by EM and volume fraction of islets by EM, LM, and DTZ staining are summarized in Table 5. The mean islet volume fraction did not differ when based on EM or LM (0.554±0.034 and 0.523±0.038, respectively). The mean islet volume fraction by DTZ, 0.68±0.04, is ∼30% greater than that by LM and 23% greater than that by EM, and these findings are significant at P<0.001. If the three preparations with low purity are excluded, then the mean islet volume fraction by EM and LM are even closer (0.591±0.030 and 0.572±0.030, respectively). The mean islet volume fraction by DTZ, 0.72±0.03, is ∼26% higher than that by LM and 22% higher than that by EM (P<0.001 for EM and for LM).
DISCUSSION
The islet transplantation field is challenged with the need of finding better ways to standardize methods for determining the composition of islet preparations. This study focused on new ways to assess pancreas tissue preparations that were digested and purified for islet transplantation. EM was used to definitively identify β-cells, non-β-islet cells, acinar cells, and duct cells. By counting a sufficient number of cells, reliable estimates of cell composition expressed as number fraction were obtained. We showed how the number fraction data from EM can be converted into a volume basis using cell volume estimates from the literature and our own observations. These estimates for cells were then put on a basis of total tissue volume by incorporating estimates of extracellular volume fraction in islet and non-islet tissues, leading to estimates of islet volume fraction, which is the basis for conventional purity estimation. We have used these methods and calculational framework to analyze the properties of 33 freshly isolated human islet preparations used for clinical transplants.
This is the first study to use ultrastructural analysis for quantifying the cell composition of freshly isolated human islet preparations. Previous studies with human islets isolated or within the pancreas have used immunohistochemical staining. A few studies have reported results in terms of number fraction, such as the number of β-cells relative to the number of all islet cells; most have reported volume fraction, eg, the volume of β-cells relative to the volume of the islet tissue (including extracellular space), which is the quantity obtained from our stereological point counting. These different bases arise from methodological differences and have often been ignored in comparing data. In some studies, other volume fraction quantities are reported and manipulation of the data using equations in the Appendix is necessary to convert the data to the volume fraction of β-cells within the whole islet volume. The difference between the volume fraction of β-cells and the number fraction of β-cells is significant because of the large difference in volume of different cell types. The two parameters are related, as shown by Equation (33) in the Appendix, and one can be estimated from the other. Using parameter values measured in this study, the volume fraction of β-cells is ∼0.84 times the number fraction of β-cells, ie, ∼16% smaller.
The proportion of β-cells within human islets, whether isolated or within the pancreas, has been controversial and widely divergent (Table 6). For islets cultured up to 4 weeks, Keymeulen et al5 reported the volume fraction of β-cells among islet cells as 0.80 (and the corresponding β-cell volume fraction of the whole islet as 0.57), which is 8% lower than our measurements of 0.865. For islets that had been shipped and then cultured for 48 h, Brissova et al16 reported the β-cell volume fraction in islets as 0.54, 12% lower than our result. The reason for these discrepancies is unclear and may reflect a difference between freshly isolated and cultured islets, as well as effects of shipping. In a study with dissociated islet cells, Street et al3 reported that the number fraction of β-cells among islet cells was 0.57, 31% lower than our measurement of 0.74. An even lower value of 0.51 was reported with laser scanning cytometry of dissociated islet cells.17 Perhaps shear forces caused by mechanical agitation lead to selective loss of fragile β-cells, thus distorting measured islet cell composition. In rodent islets, the dissociation process leads to immediate loss of ∼50% of β-cells.29
Islet composition within human pancreas has been reported in a number of studies. Using laser scanning confocal microscopy Cabrera et al15 found a β-cell number fraction of 0.55, 26% lower than our measurement. This difference may result from methodological differences: only cells that had a clearly labeled nucleus were counted,15 because cell borders could not be distinguished on confocal microscopy without specific membrane staining. However, because the nuclear volume is comparable but the total cellular volume of β-cells is more than twice that of non-β-cells (Table 2), the probability of seeing a nucleus in an arbitrary 1-μm optical section is higher in non-β-cells than in β-cells, thereby leading to a measurement of a smaller number fraction of β-cells than is actually present. In eight other studies of islets within pancreatic sections, the volume fraction of β-cells averaged 0.64±0.07 (range: 0.52–0.75), which is not significantly different from our result (0.612±0.008). We conclude that the β-cell composition of freshly isolated islets is similar to that of islets in the pancreas.
One potential source of error in all methods for characterizing islet preparations is the extent to which the very small initial sample may not be representative of the much larger volume of the entire preparation. To minimize such error, we followed a consistent procedure to keep the suspension evenly distributed during sampling by repeated inversion of the tube. To minimize errors associated with ultrastructural analysis from EM micrographs, we examined at least 500 cells. The small coefficient of variance for the number fraction of β-cells in islets (Table 3) and for the volume fraction of β-cells in islets (Table 4), together with the similar mean values of isolated islets and islets within the pancreas (Table 6), are consistent with our samples being representative of the β-cell content of islets and suggest that the data reflect a reliable value for β-cell proportion of intact, freshly isolated islets.
We also compared islet volume fraction measurements obtained by LM to values estimated from EM cell number fraction measurements. Our results (Figures 5 and 6, Table 5) demonstrate that LM point counting provides accuracy and precision equivalent to that of individual cell counting by EM. In contrast, our results also indicate that the standard method of DTZ staining grossly overestimates the islet volume fraction in the preparation. These findings are important because they show that point counting with LM to analyze 1-μm sections, which is easier to learn and employ, provides data comparable with those obtained by EM and validates the use of LM stereological point counting for determining islet purity.
Purity assessments by visual estimation after DTZ staining were 20–30% higher on average than the value estimated by EM or LM, and individual measurements were often much higher (Figures 4 and 6). A similar overestimation by the DTZ approach was previously found with immunostaining methods.3, 17 This is not surprising as the two-dimensional observations with normal LM used with DTZ staining can lead to an overestimate of the three-dimensional estimate of volume fraction. Furthermore, estimates from DTZ staining are subject to considerable observer variability, as evidenced by experienced individuals trained in the same manner often having differences that are sometimes >20%.
We also performed the first quantitative measurements of the vascular void volume fraction in fresh human islets (Figure 3). The average value, 0.14±0.01, was comparable with that previously measured in rat islets.26 This value applies to freshly isolated human islets and will decrease for islets that have been cultured for several days because of the partial collapse of these spaces with time in culture.
Overall, this study introduced new approaches to the accurate assessment of cell composition and purity in islet preparations, which are important for characterizing preparations that are transplanted into patients with diabetes. The use of EM to quantitate the cellular composition is unique and rigorous and serves as a standard to validate the easier-to-use light microscopic method. Although this work relied on analysis of the plastic-embedded tissue performed after transplants, the new quantification approach using LM may be applicable with frozen sections to estimate purity in the hours between isolation and transplantation. The approaches developed in this study should bring us closer to obtaining accurate measurements of the cell composition of islet preparations before they are transplanted into patients with diabetes.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Christopher Cahill for invaluable technical assistance with both EM and LM. This study was supported by grants from the NIH (NCRR ICR U4Z RR 16606, RO1-DK063108, the Joslin Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Center [DERC] DK36836), the JDRF Center for Islet Transplantation at Harvard Medical School, and the Diabetes Research and Wellness Foundation.
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APPENDIX
APPENDIX
Number Fraction and Volume Fraction Relationships in Islet Preparation
Our objective is to develop a framework of equations and parameters for conversion between number fraction and volume fraction measurements with human pancreatic islet preparations. We begin with development of the basic number–volume relationships for cells. We then examine volume definitions and relationships applicable to tissues, in which extracellular volume is included. The third section provides estimates of parameter values used in these relationships. We conclude with the use of packed cell volume measurements for estimating the total islet volume in a preparation.
Cells
Cell composition measurements from EM provide data on the number ni of each type of cell in the sample, where i represents the cell type. Islet cells (ICs) include β-cells and non-β-cells (Nβ). Non-ICs (NICs) include acinar (A), duct (D), and other (O) cells. The individual cell counts are summed to give the number of ICs, NICs, and total cells (TCs)
from which the IC and NIC number fraction is calculated as the number of cells of each type divided by the total number of cells in the sample
In general, the number fraction fi of any cell type i in the islet preparations is determined from
Recognizing that the volume of each cell type Vi is the product of the number of cells ni and the volume per cell vi of that type, analogous equations can be written for the volumes of ICs, NICs, and TCs in the preparation
The fractions φ of TC volume occupied by ICs and NICs is defined by
and the volume fraction of any cell type i is given by
To relate cell number fractions to cell volume fractions, we make use of the average volume per cell for different combinations of cells. For example, the average volume per cell for ICs IC is the volume of ICs divided by the number of ICs in the preparation. Using this definition, together with Equations (4, 6, 7), yields
The sequential substitutions and manipulations show how the final result is expressed entirely in terms of cell number fractions and individual cell volumes. Similar expressions are obtained for NIC and TC average volumes
The volume of ICs is the product of the number of ICs and the average volume of ICs, IC
Similarly, for TCs,
The volume fraction of ICs φIC can be related to the number fraction of ICs fIC by combining Equations (10, 16, 17) to yield
Equation (18) is the key equation for converting between IC number fraction fIC and IC volume fraction φIC. If the ratio of IC to TC average volumes IC/TC is unity, meaning all ICs have the same average volume as all NICs, then φIC=fIC.
Also of interest are the β-cell number fraction, fβIC, ie, the fraction of ICs that are β-cells,
and the β-cell volume fraction, ie, the fraction of the IC volume composed of β-cells,
To this point, all volume fractions denoted by lower case are based on the volume of cells without other tissue spaces.
Tissues
Next, we develop expressions for volume fractions on the basis of total tissue volumes, VI and VNI, the components of which are shown schematically in Figure 8.
We denote by capital Φ the volume fractions that are based on total volumes, which include both the cell and the extracellular volume in each tissue. The volume fraction of extracellular space in islet tissue is defined as
and the volume fraction ICs is given by
Analogous expressions for the volume fractions of extracellular space and cells of the non-islet tissue are given by
Components of the extracellular space, ie, the interstitial and vascular spaces, are shown separately for islets in Figure 8 because the vascular void volume fraction
constitutes a significant fraction of the total. However, the calculations in this paper make use only of the total islet extracellular volume fractions.
The volume fraction islets based on the total tissue volume ΦI, which is equivalent to the purity of an islet preparation, is defined as
Substituting for VI and VNI from Equations (23) and (25), respectively, yields
Division of numerator and denominator by the TC volume VTC, followed by substitution of Equations (10) and (11) for the quantities VIC/VTC and VNIC/VTC leads to
This key equation shows how the volume fraction of islets in the preparation ΦI may be calculated from the volume fraction of ICs φIC and the volume fractions of extracellular space in the islet (ΦIEC) and non-islet (ΦNIEC) tissues. The quantity φIC, in turn, is calculated from the IC number fraction fIC (from EM cell composition data) usingEquation (18).
Other quantities of interest related to the entire islet volume can be calculated from expressions developed to this point. The islet volume fraction, ΦβI, ie, the volume fraction of the entire islet occupied by β-cells, is defined by
Substituting Equations (20) and (24) into (31) leads to
Combining Equations (19) and (20), with (32) yields
which shows how ΦβI and fβIC are related. By combining Equations (31) and (32), one obtains
ΦIEC is a constant. If fβIC, the volume fraction of β-cells among all ICs is constant, then the volume (and number) of β-cells is directly proportional to the islet volume (or number of islet equivalents (IEs)) in an islet preparation.
An IE, a sphere of diameter 150 μm, has a volume VIE=1.77 × 106 μm3. The total number of cells in an IE is given by the volume of cells (the product of (1−ΦIEC) and VIE) divided by the average volume per IC,
and the number of β-cells in an IE is
Parameters
Estimates of cell volumes and tissue extracellular volumes are required to carry out the calculations described here. Cell volume estimates used in carrying out calculations are summarized in Table 2. Values for β- and non-β cells (assumed to have properties of α-cells) are taken from measurements with freshly isolated and purified rat islets.30, 31 The β-cell volume for freshly isolated islets reflects an estimated 5% loss from the commonly accepted value of ∼1000 μm3 for the native pancreas,32, 33 which is consistent with a partial degranulation during isolation and dispersion. Acinar volume in the mature pancreas on average is within the 1300–1800 μm3 range reported for the adult rat34, 35, 36 and it is assumed that approximately 20–25% of the volume in freshly isolated preparations is lost from degranulation. Estimates for duct and other cells are from our observations (Bonner-Weir, S., unpublished). After several days in culture, surviving β-cells partially regranulate. Acinar cells are more prone to death when cultured and are not as well studied.
Available data for estimating the extracellular volume fractions ΦIEC and ΦNIEC are limited. In one study,37 the extracellular spaces in islet and non-islet tissues of the mouse in vivo were determined by sorbitol distribution experiments to be 39 and 26% of tissue water, respectively, based on an estimated tissue water content of 75%, which corresponds to ΦIEC=0.29 and ΦNIEC=0.19 when based on total tissue volume. We reanalyzed the original data37 and obtained ΦIEC=0.288±0.062 (mean±s.d., n=3). In a study using stereological point counting with electron micrographs of rat islets,26 the extracellular volume fraction averaged 0.203±0.088 (n=3). These estimates are not significantly different (P<0.05). In this study, we estimated the vascular volume fraction ΦVI of human islets to be ∼0.14 using stereological point counting with light microscopy, which represents the lower bound for estimation of ΦIEC because interstitial space is not included. The larger value of 0.2937 was used in the calculations. If a value <0.29 had been used, only modest changes would have occurred in calculated quantities. For example, the islet volume fraction calculated from Equation (30) would have values of ∼0.55, 0.53, and 0.51 for values of ΦIEC equal to 0.29, 0.203, and 0.14, respectively. After 24 h in culture, the vascular volume of isolated islets collapses, completely for rodent islets and incompletely for human islets, leading to a substantial reduction in islet volume (Bonner-Weir S, unpublished).
Islet volume fraction by point counting with lm
We define the number of points falling on the islet tissue as PI, non-islet tissue as PNI, and vascular space as PV. If the vascular space is included as part of the islet, the volume fraction of islets ΦI can be calculated from
where the numerator is the number of points falling within the domain of islets and the denominator is the total number of points over the tissue. If the vascular space is analyzed separately, then we first ignore the vascular space and calculate the islet volume fraction exclusive of islet vascular spaces from
The tissue is then reanalyzed at higher magnification ( × 830) to obtain the vascular void fraction, ΦVI in the islets from
The islet volume fraction can then calculated from
Equation (40) is equivalent to Equation (37), as can be verified by substituting Equations (38) and (39) into Equation (40). The second method, Equations (38, 39, 40), was employed herein because it provided more consistent results.
Notations
fA, Number fraction of acinar cells among all cells
fD, Number fraction of duct cells among all cells
fi, Number fraction of cell type i
fIC, Number fraction of all ICs
fO, Number fraction of all ‘other’ cell types among all cells
fNβ, Number fraction of non-β-cells among all cells
fNIC, Number fraction of all NICs
fβ, Number fraction of β-cells among all cells
fβIC, Number fraction of β-cells among all ICs
nA, Number of acinar cells
nD, Number of duct cells
ni, Number of cells of type i
nIC, Number of ICs
nIE, Number of cells in an IE volume
NIE, Number of IEs
(NIE)DTZ, Number of IEs calculated from DTZ staining data
nNIC, Number of NICs
nNβ, Number of non-β-cells
nO, Number of other cells
nTC, Total number of cells
nβ, Number of β-cells
nβIE, Number of β-cells in an IE volume
PI, Number of points falling within the domain of islets
PNI, Number of points falling within the domain of non-islets tissue
PV, Number of points falling within the domain of islet vascular space
VA, Volume of acinar cells
VD, Volume of duct cells
VI, Total volume of the islet domain
VIC, Volume of ICs
VIE, Volume of an IE (1.77 × 106 μm3)
VIEC, Extracellular volume within the islet domain
VINT, Volume of interstitial space in islet
VIXV, Volume of ICs and interstitial space within the islet domain
VNV, Total volume of the non-islet domain
VNIC, Volume of NICs
VNIEC, Extracellular volume within the non-islet domain
VNβ, Volume of non-β-cells
VO, Volume of other cells
VTC, Total volume of all ICs and NICs
VV, Vascular volume within the islet domain
VVI, Volume of vascular voids in islet
Vβ, Volume of β-cells
φIC, Volume fraction of ICs among all cells
φNIC, Volume fraction of NICs among all cells
φβIC, Volume fraction of β-cells among all ICs
ΦD, Fractional distribution volume
ΦI, Volume fraction of islets
ΦIC, Volume fraction of ICs within the islets
ΦIEC, Volume fraction of islet extracellular space within the islets
ΦIXV, Volume fraction of islets exclusive of islet vascular spaces
ΦNIC, Volume fraction of NICs based on the total non-islet volume
ΦNIEC, Volume fraction of non-islet extracellular space based on the total non-islet volume
ΦVI, Volume fraction of vascular voids within islets
ΦβI, Volume fraction of β-cells within whole islet volume:
(ΦIC)EM, ΦIC calculated from electron microscopy ultrastructural analysis
(ΦI)DTZ, ΦI calculated from DTZ staining data
(ΦI)EM, ΦI calculated from electron microscopy ultrastructural analysis
νA, Cell volume of acinar cells
νD, Cell volume of duct cells
νNβ, Cell volume of non-β-cells
νO, Cell volume of other cells
νβ, Cell volume of β-cells
IC, Average cell volume for ICs
NIC, Average cell volume for NICs
TC, Average cell volume for all of the cells
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Pisania, A., Weir, G., O'Neil, J. et al. Quantitative analysis of cell composition and purity of human pancreatic islet preparations. Lab Invest 90, 1661–1675 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/labinvest.2010.124
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/labinvest.2010.124
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