Lake S P, Bassett P D, Larkins A, Revell J, Walczak K, Chamberlain J, Rumford G M, London N J, Veitch P S, Bell P R
Department of Surgery, University of Leicester, England, United Kingdom.
Diabetes. 1989 Jan;38 Suppl 1:143-5. doi: 10.2337/diab.38.1.s143.
A new method is described for the large-scale purification of human pancreatic islets with a discontinuous gradient of bovine serum albumin formed on an IBM 2991 cell separator. Fifteen human pancreases were processed, and after density-gradient centrifugation, a mean of 2643 islets/ml pancreatic digest were recovered with a mean purity of 63% and contained in 430 microliter mean vol. Viability of gradient-isolated islets was compared with that of non-density-gradient islets (handpicked) and showed no difference in function. This technique allows isolation of intact, viable human islets of Langerhans of sufficient purity for potential human transplantation.