GLP-1 blood sugar regulation in islet transplants • AIDSPIT 1994 • @1MEMO 20251114

Poster 13th Workshop of the AIDSPIT Study Group , Igls (Austria) January 23–25, 1994• Digitally remastered by author, publisher, M.P.M. van der Burg • Miracles•Media • 20251114 • TakeNode 810cc881-d084-4d2e-b252-d432918b1946 • #GLP1

GLP-1 blood sugar regulation in islet transplants

GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1) is now well-known from the anti-diabetic drugs that mimic the action of this natural hormone GLP-1, to treat type 2 diabetes and obesity. They work by stimulating insulin release, reducing glucagon secretion, slowing stomach emptying, and suppressing appetite, which leads to lower blood sugar and weight loss.

May 1992 we were the first to show direct potentiation of the insulin response from isolated islets by a (near-)physiological dose of the gut hormone GLP-1 during perifusion (in vitro) of canine islets at 7.5-10 mM glucose levels (1,2).

Jan 1994 we next showed this incretin effect of GLP-1 also after islet transplantation (in vivo, in dogs) in this poster (3) and abstract (4) presented at the 13th Workshop of the AIDSPIT (aka AIDPIT) Study Group , Igls, Austria, January 23–25, 1994.

Background of the work was posted earlier this year (5) and the work was published Nov 1994 in my PhD thesis Pancreatic islet transplantation , available online (6).

Notes

1) Van der Burg MPM, Guicherit OR, Scherft JP, Frölich M, Terpstra JL, Gooszen HG. Function after intrasplenic transplantation of islets of Langerhans in dogs (translated from dutch: Functie na intralienale transplantatie van eilandjes van Langerhans in de hond). Surgeon days ’92 of the Dutch Surgery Society, Rotterdam (The Netherlands) May 21–22, 1992. In : Gut factors controlling pancreatic islets • 20240910 | Michel van der Burg | michelvanderburg•com URL https://michelvanderburg.com/2024/09/10/gut-factors-controlling-pancreatic-islets-20240910/

2) van der Burg MPM, Guicherit OR, Frölich M, Gooszen HG. Insulinotropic effects of cholecystokinin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide and glucagon-like peptide-1 during perifusion of short-term cultured canine isolated islets. Regul Pept. 1995 Dec 7;60(1):61-7. doi: 10.1016/0167-0115(95)00122-4. PMID: 8747785.

3) Metabolic control after canine islet transplantation. M.P.M. van der Burg, P.T.R. van Suylichem, O.R. Guicherit, J.H.M. van Deijnen, M. Frölich, and H.G. Gooszen (Universities of Leiden & Groningen, The Netherlands). Poster presented at the 13th Workshop of the AIDSPIT Study Group , Igls, Austria, January 23–25, 1994 •

4) Metabolic control after canine islet transplantation. Van der Burg M.P.M., Guicherit O.R., van Suylichem P.T.R., Frölich M., van Deijnen J.H.M. , Gooszen H.G. (Leiden, The Netherlands; Groningen, The Netherlands). Horm metab Res 1994; 26: 63. (Abstract). View/Download file 1MEMO_20251113_2

5) Background of this work was posted in Dutch Islets Transplant Team • @1MEMO 20250125 • URL https://michelvanderburg.com/2025/01/25/dutch-islets-transplant-team-1memo-20250125/

6) Michael P.M. van der Burg. Pancreatic islet transplantation: studies on the technique and efficacy of islet isolation and transplantation. (Doctoral Thesis, Faculty of Medicine, Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC) , Leiden University), Boskoop: M.P.M. van der Burg | Miracles.Media (ISBN electronic, pdf, 9789080216402 ; ISBN print 9789080216419, 9080216410), 1994: 192 p. URL Thesis Repository Leiden University https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3486604

PM – Recording of the 13th AIDSPIT seminar on lessons from clinical islet transplantation was posted yesterday (7).

7) Clinical Islet Transplantation 13th AIDSPIT • @1MEMO 20251113 • URL https://michelvanderburg.com/2025/11/13/clinical-islet-transplantation-13th-aidspit-1memo-20251113/

#GLP1 #diabetes #islets #transplant #AIDSPIT

Updates

20251127 title updated – insert : AIDSPIT 1994

Citation info : GLP-1 blood sugar regulation in islet transplants • AIDSPIT 1994 • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20251114 • TakeNode 810cc881-d084-4d2e-b252-d432918b1946 • URL https://michelvanderburg.com/2025/11/14

Clinical Islet Transplantation 13th AIDSPIT • @1MEMO 20251113


Seminar on lessons from clinical islet transplantation

Chairman K. Federlin (Giessen, Germany) opened the seminar Tuesday, January 25, 1994 and David Scharp began with his lesson from the Center in St. Louis (USA) at the 13th Workshop of the AIDSPIT * Study Group , Igls, Austria, January 23–25, 1994.

Notes


Video image: Iodixanol-UWS purified human islets, stained with dithizone (March 18, 1999) • Michel van der Burg , Leiden Islet Laboratory LUMC .

Second, remastered, edition created from the 1st video edition published 20170208 via Vimeo at 1-memo.com .

* AIDSPIT later known as AIDPIT.

Recorded with Olympus mini-tape dictaphone, and re-recorded from the speaker of the dictaphone.

My presentations at the event

Cell preservation in University of Wisconsin solution during isolation of canine islets of Langerhans. Van der Burg M.P.M., Guicherit O.R., Frölich M., Gooszen H.G. (Leiden, The Netherlands) . Horm metab Res 1994; 26: 63. (Abstract). File 1MEMO_20251113_2

Metabolic control after canine islet transplantation. Van der Burg M.P.M., Guicherit O.R., van Suylichem P.T.R., Frölich M., van Deijnen J.H.M. , Gooszen H.G. (Leiden, The Netherlands; Groningen, The Netherlands). Horm metab Res 1994; 26: 63. (Abstract). File 1MEMO_20251113_2

View/Download file 1MEMO_20251113_2

Citation info : Clinical Islet Transplantation 13th AIDSPIT • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20251113 • TakeNode 24209f1e-67d5-4540-9115-89efcc6090c9 • URL https://michelvanderburg.com/2025/11/13/clinical-islet-transplantation-13th-aidspit-1memo-20251113/

Iodixanol-UWS Human Islet Purification 1998 Abstract • @1MEMO 20251102

Front page Acta Diabetologica • Download Abstract Below

Abstract published in Acta Diabetologica 1998 of Iodixanol-UWS Human Islet Purification in 1998 at the Diabetes Research Institute in Miami. Abstracts book of the 18th Workshop of the AIDSPIT Study Group in Igls, Austria, Jan 1999.

Van der Burg MPM, Ranuncoli A, Molano R, Kirlew T, Ringers J, Bouwman E, Ricordi C. Efficacy of the novel iodixanol-UWS density gradient for human islet purification (Abstract). Acta Diabetol 1998; 35: 247.
View / Download abstract (file 1MEMO_20251102_1.pdf) below .


Notes

Abstract added in full post :
Efficacy of the novel iodixanol-UWS density gradient for human islet purification • Igls Aidspit 1999 • 20241202 • URL michelvanderburg.com/2024/12/02

Citation info : Iodixanol-UWS Human Islet Purification 1998 Abstract • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20251102 • URL michelvanderburg.com/2025/11/02/

Islet Transplantation LUMC News Surprise • @1MEMO 20251020

Diabetic (dutch ‘Suikerzieke) … Parool, 6 Jan 1990 • @1MEMO 20251020

Big surprise today , to encounter this nice news article by journalist Rob van Dijk reporting on our pancreatic islet transplantation breakthrough in the Leiden University Hospital (now LUMC) in the Amsterdam based Dutch national newspaper Parool , Saturday 6 January 1990 (1).

I was searching actually for a better copy of a different news article I have archived on my clinical islet transplantation work (Newspaper Volkskrant 10 April 1999) in the Delpher archive of the National Library of the Netherlands , scrolling the search results, and noticed this Parool article – I didn’t know it existed ;)

Journalist Rob van Dijk did not interview me for the Parool, so I assume his source was the interview I gave for publication in Cicero, the biweekly LUMC publication, and the Dutch newspaper ‘Leidsch Dagblad’, and posted a year ago (2).

The articles reports (my translation from dutch*) :

Transplantation

Islet transplantation has been possible for a few years now, but it doesn’t (yet?) work in humans. The technique itself isn’t that complicated: as many islets of Langerhans as possible are extracted from a pancreas, injected into the diabetic patient’s liver or spleen, and thus, start producing insulin. However, that “thus” is still a bit tricky… …
The major problems lie in the fact that the yield of properly functioning islets is too small (at least 30 percent of the islets must be obtained undamaged to achieve sufficient insulin production after a transplant) and that the suspensions are too impure. Nevertheless, progress is being made.
The best news comes from Leiden University Hospital. There, biologist M. van der Burg, MSc has developed a method to isolate a very high and pure yield of islets from a dog’s pancreas. Van der Burg succeeded in isolating 40 percent of the vital islets from a dog’s pancreas. Through special processing, he was able to completely purify these cell clumps of 90 percent of excess and complicating pancreatic tissue. These islets were injected into the spleen of the same dog, where they produced sufficient insulin. This initial experiment has since been repeated in Leiden with several dogs with the same success. However, major challenges remain, not the least of which is the rejection problem. The Leiden experiments used the dog’s own tissue. The big question remains how the human immune system reacts when islets from a donor are injected.

*NL (dutch) quote :

Transplantatie

Sinds een paar jaar is eilandjestransplantatie wel mogelijk, alleen, bij de mens werkt het (nog?) niet. De techniek is op zichzelf niet zo ingewikkeld: men haalt zoveel mogelijk eilandjes van Langerhans uit een pancreas, spuit die bij de suikerzieke in lever of milt in en dan gaan ze dus insuline maken. Met dat ‘dus’ ligt het echter nog moeilijk… …
De grote problemen schuilen hem erin dat de oogst aan goed werkende eilandjes te gering is (men moet ten minste 30 procent van de eilandjes onbeschadigd te pakken krijgen om na een transplantatie voldoende insulineproduktie te verkrijgen) en dat de suspensies te onzuiver zijn. Toch zit er schot in.
Het beste nieuws komt uit het academisch ziekenhuis te Leiden. Daar heeft de bioloog drs. M. van der Burg een methode ontwikkeld om uit een hondepancreas een zeer hoge en zuivere oogst aan eilandjes te isoleren. Van der Burg slaagde erin uit de alvleesklier van een hond 40 procent van de vitale eilandjes te isoleren, door een speciale bewerking kon hij deze celklompjes voor 90 procent absoluut zuiveren van overbodig en complicerend pancreasweefsel. Deze eilandjes werden ingespoten in de milt van dezelfde hond en produceren daar voldoende insuline. Dit eerste experiment is in Leiden intussen met meerdere honden met hetzelfde succes herhaald. Maar er zijn nog grote problemen op te lossen en bepaald niet het geringste daarvan is dat van de afstoting. Bij de Leidse experimenten werd gebruik gemaakt van eigen weefsel van de hond. De grote vraag blijft hoe het immuunsysteem van de mens reageert als er eilandjes van een donor worden ingespoten.

Notes

1) Transplantatie. “Het Parool”. Amsterdam, 06-01-1990. Retrieved in Delpher on 20-10-2025, https://resolver.kb.nl/resolve?urn=ABCDDD:010834140:mpeg21:p017

2) Islet Transplantation Breakthrough in Leiden University Hospital • 20240830 • Michel van der Burg • michelvanderburg•com • URL https://michelvanderburg.com/2024/08/30/islet-transplantation-breakthrough-in-leiden-university-hospital-20240830/

Citation info : Islet Transplantation LUMC News Surprise • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20251020 • URL michelvanderburg.com/2025/10/20/

Islet Transplantation LUMC News Surprise • @1MEMO 20251020

Diabetic (dutch ‘Suikerzieke) … Parool, 6 Jan 1990 • @1MEMO 20251020

Big surprise today , to encounter this nice news article by journalist Rob van Dijk reporting on our pancreatic islet transplantation breakthrough in the Leiden University Hospital (now LUMC) in the Amsterdam based Dutch national newspaper Parool , Saturday 6 January 1990 (1).

I was searching actually for a better copy of a different news article I have archived on my clinical islet transplantation work (Newspaper Volkskrant 10 April 1999) in the Delpher archive of the National Library of the Netherlands , scrolling the search results, and noticed this Parool article – I didn’t know it existed ;)

Journalist Rob van Dijk did not interview me for the Parool, so I assume his source was the interview I gave for publication in Cicero, the biweekly LUMC publication, and the Dutch newspaper ‘Leidsch Dagblad’, and posted a year ago (2).

The articles reports (my translation from dutch*) :

Transplantation

Islet transplantation has been possible for a few years now, but it doesn’t (yet?) work in humans. The technique itself isn’t that complicated: as many islets of Langerhans as possible are extracted from a pancreas, injected into the diabetic patient’s liver or spleen, and thus, start producing insulin. However, that “thus” is still a bit tricky… …
The major problems lie in the fact that the yield of properly functioning islets is too small (at least 30 percent of the islets must be obtained undamaged to achieve sufficient insulin production after a transplant) and that the suspensions are too impure. Nevertheless, progress is being made.
The best news comes from Leiden University Hospital. There, biologist M. van der Burg, MSc has developed a method to isolate a very high and pure yield of islets from a dog’s pancreas. Van der Burg succeeded in isolating 40 percent of the vital islets from a dog’s pancreas. Through special processing, he was able to completely purify these cell clumps of 90 percent of excess and complicating pancreatic tissue. These islets were injected into the spleen of the same dog, where they produced sufficient insulin. This initial experiment has since been repeated in Leiden with several dogs with the same success. However, major challenges remain, not the least of which is the rejection problem. The Leiden experiments used the dog’s own tissue. The big question remains how the human immune system reacts when islets from a donor are injected.

*NL (dutch) quote :

Transplantatie

Sinds een paar jaar is eilandjestransplantatie wel mogelijk, alleen, bij de mens werkt het (nog?) niet. De techniek is op zichzelf niet zo ingewikkeld: men haalt zoveel mogelijk eilandjes van Langerhans uit een pancreas, spuit die bij de suikerzieke in lever of milt in en dan gaan ze dus insuline maken. Met dat ‘dus’ ligt het echter nog moeilijk… …
De grote problemen schuilen hem erin dat de oogst aan goed werkende eilandjes te gering is (men moet ten minste 30 procent van de eilandjes onbeschadigd te pakken krijgen om na een transplantatie voldoende insulineproduktie te verkrijgen) en dat de suspensies te onzuiver zijn. Toch zit er schot in.
Het beste nieuws komt uit het academisch ziekenhuis te Leiden. Daar heeft de bioloog drs. M. van der Burg een methode ontwikkeld om uit een hondepancreas een zeer hoge en zuivere oogst aan eilandjes te isoleren. Van der Burg slaagde erin uit de alvleesklier van een hond 40 procent van de vitale eilandjes te isoleren, door een speciale bewerking kon hij deze celklompjes voor 90 procent absoluut zuiveren van overbodig en complicerend pancreasweefsel. Deze eilandjes werden ingespoten in de milt van dezelfde hond en produceren daar voldoende insuline. Dit eerste experiment is in Leiden intussen met meerdere honden met hetzelfde succes herhaald. Maar er zijn nog grote problemen op te lossen en bepaald niet het geringste daarvan is dat van de afstoting. Bij de Leidse experimenten werd gebruik gemaakt van eigen weefsel van de hond. De grote vraag blijft hoe het immuunsysteem van de mens reageert als er eilandjes van een donor worden ingespoten.

Notes

1) Transplantatie. “Het Parool”. Amsterdam, 06-01-1990. Retrieved in Delpher on 20-10-2025, https://resolver.kb.nl/resolve?urn=ABCDDD:010834140:mpeg21:p017

2) Islet Transplantation Breakthrough in Leiden University Hospital • 20240830 • Michel van der Burg • michelvanderburg•com • URL https://michelvanderburg.com/2024/08/30/islet-transplantation-breakthrough-in-leiden-university-hospital-20240830/

Citation info : Islet Transplantation LUMC News Surprise • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20251020 • URL michelvanderburg.com/2025/10/20/

Milan Papers • @1MEMO 20250205

Manuscripts (Preprints) and Abstracts copies of the presentations at the IPITA 1997 meeting in Milan (Italy).

1) Van der Burg MPM, Basir I, Zwaan RP, Bouwman E. Porcine islet preservation during isolation in University of Wisconsin solution. Transplant Proc. 1998 Mar;30(2):360-1. doi: 10.1016/s0041-1345(97)01307-9. PMID: 9532079.

PMID_9532079_20250205_1 • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20250205_1 • CC BY-NC-ND • TakeNode 406dbe1e-66e3-4edc-acb8-83fdc8ddc5c8

2) Van der Burg MPM, Basir I, Bouwman E. No porcine islet loss during density gradient purification in a novel iodixanol in University of Wisconsin solution. Transplant Proc. 1998 Mar;30(2):362-3. doi: 10.1016/s0041-1345(97)01308-0. PMID: 9532080.

PMID_9532080_20250205_2 • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20250205_2 • CC BY-NC-ND • TakeNode c60e0743-946a-4950-b156-7e671593e482

3) Abstracts

Van der Burg MPM, Basir I, Bouwman E. No porcine islet loss during density gradient purification in a novel iodixanol in University of Wisconsin solution (Abstract). Acta Diabetol 1997; 34: 101.

Van der Burg MPM, Basir I, Zwaan RP, Bouwman E. Porcine islet preservation during isolation in University of Wisconsin solution (Abstract). Acta Diabetol 1997; 34: 136.

1MEMO_ 20250205_3 • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20250205_3 • CC BY-NC-ND • TakeNode e5b1c598-fc48-4f2a-93ae-526cd4be082e

Citation info : Milan Papers • Michel van der Burg • Miracles.Media • @1MEMO 20250205 • URL michelvanderburg.com/2025/02/05/