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      Islet isolation assessment in man and large animals

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          Method for the Isolation of Intact Islets of Langerhans from the Rat Pancreas

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            Immunoassay of Insulin: Two Antibody System: Plasma Insulin Levels of Normal, Subdiabetic and Diabetic Rats

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              Rapid assessment of islet viability with acridine orange and propidium iodide.

              A simple, rapid method for estimating the viability of isolated islets of Langerhans with fluorescent dyes is described. Low concentrations of acridine orange and propidium iodide (AO/PI) were used to visualize living and dead islet cells simultaneously. AO/PI-stained islets can be divided into three distinct groups. Group A islets fluoresce green, contain insulin, and have normal ultrastructure; group C islets fluoresce primarily red, contain little or no insulin, and have cells with disrupted cellular membranes. Group B islets fluoresce red, green, and yellow. The yellow color is due to the addition of two primary colors from the superimposed red and green fluorescing cells. In this assay, the interpretation that red islet cells are dead and green islet cells are alive was confirmed by sequentially staining single islet cells with AO/PI and trypan blue. The observation that red islets are dead was confirmed by heat-killing, enzymatically damaging, treating with ethanol, or depriving islets of nutrients and observing the red fluorescence. This assay should be useful in studies where the assessment of islet viability is essential.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Acta Diabetologica Latina
                Acta diabet. lat
                Springer Nature
                0001-5563
                1432-5233
                July 1990
                July 1990
                : 27
                : 3
                : 185-195
                Article
                10.1007/BF02581331
                2075782
                ebf9ace4-f0aa-46b6-883f-a58f05930e52
                © 1990
                History

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