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ARA 290

Cibinetide, PHBSP, PH-BSP, Helix B surface peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 51
Trials 5
Score 3
2021 pubmed 7 citations

Cibinetide Protects Isolated Human Islets in a Stressful Environment and Improves Engraftment in the Perspective of Intra Portal Islet Transplantation.

Yao. Ming M; Domogatskaya. Anna A; Ågren. Nils N; Watanabe. Masaaki M; Tokodai. Kazuaki K; Brines. Michael M; Cerami. Anthony A; Ericzon. Bo-Göran BG; Kumagai-Braesch. Makiko M; Lundgren. Torbjörn T

Key Findings

  • Cibinetide maintains ATP levels and lowers caspase 3/7 activity in human islets exposed to inflammatory cytokines
  • It improves insulin secretion of the protected islets
  • In a blood‑loop model, cibinetide reduces platelet consumption linked to the instant blood‑mediated inflammatory reaction (IBMIR)
  • In mice, peri‑operative cibinetide leads to higher human insulin and C‑peptide levels and fewer inflammatory CD11b+ cells around transplanted islets

Practical Outcomes

  • Cibinetide looks like a potential drug to help protect beta‑cells during islet transplantation and maybe later for preserving pancreatic function in diabetes, but it’s still experimental. No dosing or DIY protocol is available yet, so it’s mainly of interest for tracking future clinical trials rather than immediate self‑application.

Summary

The study shows that cibinetide (also called ara-290) can protect human pancreatic islet cells from inflammation and improve their survival when transplanted, at least in lab dishes and mouse models. It keeps the cells' energy levels up, reduces cell death signals, helps them release insulin better, and lessens the blood clotting reaction that normally kills many transplanted cells. While promising for future diabetes treatments, the work is still early and not ready for personal use.

Abstract

During intra-portal pancreatic islet transplantation (PITx), innate immune reactions such as the instant blood mediated inflammatory reaction (IBMIR) cause an immediate loss of islets. The non-hematopoietic erythropoietin analogue cibinetide has previously shown islet-protective effects in mouse PITx. Herein, we aimed to confirm cibinetide's efficacy on human islets, and to characterize its effect on IBMIR. We cultured human islets with pro-inflammatory cytokines for 18 hours with or without cibinetide. ATP content and caspase 3/7 activity were measured. Dynamic glucose perfusion assay was used to evaluate islet function. To evaluate cibinetides effect on IBMIR, human islets were incubated in heparinized polyvinyl chloride tubing system with ABO compatible blood and rotated for 60 minutes to mimic the portal vein system. Moreover, human islets were transplanted into athymic mice livers via the portal vein with or without perioperative cibinetide treatment. The mice were sacrificed six days following transplantation and the livers were analyzed for human insulin and serum for human C-peptide levels. Histological examination of recipient livers to evaluate islet graft infiltration by CD11b<sup>+</sup> cells was performed. Our results show that cibinetide maintained human islet ATP levels and reduced the caspase 3/7 activity during culture with pro-inflammatory cytokines and improved their insulin secreting capacity. In the PVC loop system, administration of cibinetide reduced the IBMIR-induced platelet consumption. In human islet to athymic mice PITx, cibinetide treatment showed an increased amount of human insulin in the livers and higher serum human C-peptide, while histological examination of the livers showed reduced infiltration of pro-inflammatory CD11b<sup>+</sup> cells around islets grafts compared to the controls. In summary, Cibinetide protected isolated human islets in a pro-inflammatory milieu and reduced IBMIR related platelet consumption. It improved engraftment of human islets in athymic mice. The study confirms that cibinetide is a promising agent to be used in clinical PITx.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-01-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1177/09636897211039739

Citations

7

References

51