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Dive into the research topics where Han-Hung Huang is active.

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Featured researches published by Han-Hung Huang.


Experimental Diabetes Research | 2011

Exercise Increases Insulin Content and Basal Secretion in Pancreatic Islets in Type 1 Diabetic Mice

Han-Hung Huang; Kevin L. Farmer; Jill Windscheffel; Katie Yost; Mary Power; Douglas E. Wright; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

Exercise appears to improve glycemic control for people with type 1 diabetes (T1D). However, the mechanism responsible for this improvement is unknown. We hypothesized that exercise has a direct effect on the insulin-producing islets. Eight-week-old mice were divided into four groups: sedentary diabetic, exercised diabetic, sedentary control, and exercised control. The exercised groups participated in voluntary wheel running for 6 weeks. When compared to the control groups, the islet density, islet diameter, and β-cell proportion per islet were significantly lower in both sedentary and exercised diabetic groups and these alterations were not improved with exercise. The total insulin content and insulin secretion were significantly lower in sedentary diabetics compared to controls. Exercise significantly improved insulin content and insulin secretion in islets in basal conditions. Thus, some improvements in exercise-induced glycemic control in T1D mice may be due to enhancement of insulin content and secretion in islets.


Islets | 2011

Low insulin content of large islet population is present in situ and in isolated islets.

Han-Hung Huang; Lesya Novikova; Williams Sj; Smirnova; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

The existence of morphologically distinct populations of islets in the pancreas was described over 60 years ago. Unfortunately, little attention has been paid to possible functional differences between islet subpopulations until recently. We demonstrated that one population, the small islets, were superior to large islets in a number of functional aspects. However, that work did not determine whether these differences were inherent, or whether they arose because of the challenge of isolation procedures. Nor, were there data to explain the differences in insulin secretion. We utilized immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence, ELISA, and transmission electron microscopy to compare the unique characteristics found in isolated rat islet populations in situ and after isolation. Insulin secretion of small isolated islets was significantly higher compared to large islets, which correlated with higher insulin content/area in small islets (in situ), a higher density of insulin secretory granules, and greater insulin content/volume in isolated islets. Specifically, the core b-cells of the large islets contained less insulin/cell with a lower insulin granule density than peripheral b-cells. When insulin secretion was normalized for total insulin content, large and small islets released the same percentage of total insulin. Small islets had a higher density of cells/area than large islets in vitro and in situ. The data provide a possible explanation for the inferior insulin secretion from large islets, as they have a lower total cell density and the b-cells of the core contain less insulin/cell.


Organogenesis | 2010

Reduction of diffusion barriers in isolated rat islets improves survival, but not insulin secretion or transplantation outcome.

S. Janette Williams; Han-Hung Huang; Karen Kover; Wayne V. Moore; Cory Berkland; Milind Singh; Irina S. Smirnova; Ronal R. Macgregor; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

For people with type 1 diabetes and severe hypoglycemic unawareness, islet transplants offer hope for improving the quality of life. However, islet cell death occurs quickly during or after transplantation, requiring large quantities of islets per transplant. The purpose of this study was to determine whether poor function demonstrated in large islets was a result of diffusion barriers and if removing those barriers could improve function and transplantation outcomes. Islets were isolated from male DA rats and measured for cell viability, islet survival, glucose diffusion and insulin secretion. Modeling of diffusion barriers was completed using dynamic partial differential equations for a sphere. Core cell death occurred in 100% of the large islets (diameter > 150 μm), resulting in poor survival within 7 days after isolation. In contrast, small islets (diameter < 100 μm) exhibited good survival rates in culture (91%). Glucose diffusion into islets was tracked with 2-NBDG; 4.2 μm/min in small islets and 2.8 μm/min in large islets. 2-NBDG never permeated to the core cells of islets larger than 150μm diameter. Reducing the diffusion barrier in large islets improved their immediate and long-term viability in culture. However, reduction of the diffusion barrier in large islets failed to improve their inferior in vitro insulin secretion compared to small islets, and did not return glucose control to diabetic animals following transplantation. Thus, diffusion barriers lead to low viability and poor survival for large islets, but are not solely responsible for the inferior insulin secretion or poor transplantation outcomes of large versus small islets.


Islets | 2013

Small human islets comprised of more β-cells with higher insulin content than large islets.

Farhat B; Almelkar A; Williams Sj; Han-Hung Huang; Zamierowksi D; Lesya Novikova; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

For the past 30 y, data have suggested that unique islet populations exist, based on morphology and glucose sensitivity. Yet little has been done to determine the mechanism of these functional differences. The purpose of this study was to determine whether human islets were comprised functionally unique populations, and to elucidate a possible mechanism. Islets or pancreatic sections from 29 human donors were analyzed. Islets were isolated and measured for insulin secretion, cell composition and organization, insulin and glucagon granule density and insulin content. Insulin secretion was significantly greater in small compared with large islets. In sectioned human pancreata, β-cells comprised a higher proportion of the total endocrine cells in small islets (63%) than large islets (39%). A higher percentage of β-cells in small islets contacted blood vessels (44%) compared with large islets (31%). Total insulin content of isolated human islets was significantly greater in the small (1323 ± 512 μIU/IE) compared with large islets (126 ± 48 μIU/IE). There was less immunostaining for insulin in the large islets from human pancreatic sections, especially in the core of the islet, compared with small islets. The results suggest that differences in insulin secretion between large and small islets may be due to a higher percentage of β-cells in small islets with more β-cells in contact with blood vessels and a higher concentration of insulin/β-cell in small islets.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Development of Diabetes in Lean Ncb5or-Null Mice is Associated with Manifestations of Endoplasmic Reticulum and Oxidative Stress in Beta Cells

WenFang Wang; Ying Guo; Ming Xu; Han-Hung Huang; Lesya Novikova; Kevin Larade; Zhi-gang Jiang; Terri C. Thayer; Jennifer R. Frontera; Daniel Aires; Helin Ding; John Turk; Clayton E. Mathews; H. Franklin Bunn; Lisa Stehno-Bittel; Hao Zhu

NADH-cytochrome b5 oxidoreductase (Ncb5or) is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated redox enzyme involved in fatty acid metabolism, and phenotypic abnormalities of Ncb5or(-/-) mice include diabetes and lipoatrophy. These mice are lean and insulin-sensitive but become hyperglycemic at age 7 weeks as a result of β-cell dysfunction and loss. Here we examine early cellular and molecular events associated with manifestations of β-cell defects in Ncb5or(-/-) mice. We observe lower islet β-cell content in pancreata at age 4 weeks and prominent ER distention in β-cells by age 5 weeks. Ultrastructural changes progress rapidly in severity from age 5 to 6 weeks, and their frequency rises from 10% of β-cells at 5 weeks to 33% at 6 weeks. These changes correlate temporally with the onset of diabetes. ER stress responses and lipid load in Ncb5or(-/-) β-cells were assessed with isolated islets from mice at age 5 weeks. Expression levels of the stress marker protein Grp78/BiP and of phosphorylated eIF2α protein were found to be reduced, although their transcript levels did not decline. This pattern stands in contrast to the canonical unfolded protein response. Ncb5or(-/-) β-cells also accumulated higher intracellular levels of palmitate and other free fatty acids and exhibited greater reactive oxygen species production than wild-type cells. An alloxan-susceptible genetic background was found to confer accelerated onset of diabetes in Ncb5or(-/-) mice. These findings provide the first direct evidence that manifestations of diabetes in lean Ncb5or(-/-) mice involve saturated free fatty acid overload of β-cells and ER and oxidative stress responses.


Cell Transplantation | 2015

A Simple Method to Replace Islet Equivalents for Volume Quantification of Human Islets.

Han-Hung Huang; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

Human islets come in a variety of sizes and shapes, and the total volume of islets used for research or clinical transplants must be estimated in a manner that is simple and valid. Islet equivalent (IEQ) measurements are the standard estimate of islet volume. We published a new method (the Kansas method) for estimating rat islet volume using cell numbers that was reliable and valid. Here we modified the method for human islets. We measured the dimensions of isolated human islets showing that they are not spherical and became less so in larger islets, with an average smallest/largest diameter ratio of 0.73 in large islets and 0.85 in small islets. Human islets were individually loaded into 96-well plates, dissociated into single cells, and the total cell number per islet determined with computer-assisted cytometry. Based on the counted cell number per islet, a regression model was created to convert islet diameter to cell number with a high R2 value (0.99). Separate regression equations for male and female donors or young and old donors were not significantly different than the pooled data and did not improve the regression values. There was an inverse correlation between the cell number per IEQ and islet size. The Kansas method was validated with ATP/cell and cell viability data. Compared to the actual cell count, conventional IEQ measurements overestimated tissue volume of large islets by nearly double. Examples of differences in results obtained from the same data sets normalized to IEQ or the Kansas method included viability and insulin secretion concentrations. The implications of the error associated with the current IEQ method of volume estimation are discussed.


Journal of diabetes & metabolism | 2013

Effect of Exercise on Pancreatic Islets in Zucker Diabetic Fatty Rats

Sonia Rawal; Han-Hung Huang; Lesya Novikova; Tyler Hamedi; Irina V. Smirnova; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

Exercise and physical activity improve the glycemic control in people with type 2 diabetes (T2D). It is known that activity improves muscle utilization of glucose, and that exercise can spare islets if initiated prior to the onset of diabetes. However, any effect of exercise on pancreatic islet function after the diagnosis of overt diabetes is unknown. The aim of the study was to investigate the effects of exercise training on pancreatic islets in a rodent model of overt T2D. 12-week old male Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF) rats and control lean rats were divided into 4 groups: sedentary control exercised control, sedentary diabetic and exercised diabetic. Exercised rats were trained with moderate intensity running on a treadmill for 7 weeks. Assessment of plasma insulin levels, islet cell composition (relative proportion of α, β and δ cells), islet density, insulin content and islet core diameter was conducted at the end of the study. Diabetes in ZDF rats lead to high HbA1c and BGLs, which was not reversed by exercise. Diabetes caused destruction of the islet structure and significant loss of β-cells, with an increased proportion of α- and δ-cells. Exercise improved islets morphology in the diabetic group, while islet density and islet cell composition were not affected by exercise. Increased insulin immunostaining of the pancreatic islets was identified in the diabetic animals after exercise. Although exercise did not affect the diabetes-induced decrease in the proportion of islet β cells, there appeared to be an improvement in the islet architecture and in β-cell insulin content.


Islets | 2015

Differences in insulin biosynthesis pathway between small and large islets do not correspond to insulin secretion

Han-Hung Huang; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

In a variety of mammalian species, small islets secrete more insulin per volume than large islets. This difference may be due to diffusional limitations of large islets, or inherent differences in the insulin production pathways. The purpose of this study was to identify possible differences in the early phase of glucose-stimulated insulin biosynthesis between large and small islets. Isolated small and large rat islets were challenged with 30 minutes of high glucose. The expression of insulin gene transcription factors (MafA, NeuroD/ Beta2, and PDX-1), preproinsulin mRNA, proinsulin and insulin were compared between large and small islets. Under basal (low glucose) conditions, MafA and NeuroD had higher mRNA levels and greater protein amounts in large islets compared to small when normalized to GAPDH levels. 30 minutes of high glucose stimulation failed to alter the mRNA or subsequent protein levels of either gene. However, 30 minutes of high glucose suppressed activated PDX-1 protein levels in both small and large islets. High glucose stimulation did not statistically alter the preproinsulin mRNA (insulin 1 and insulin 2) levels. At the translational level, high glucose increased the proinsulin levels, and large islets showed a higher proinsulin content per cell than small islets. Insulin content per cell was not significantly different between small and large islets under basal or high glucose levels. The results fail to explain the higher level of insulin secretion noted in small versus large islets and may suggest that possible differences lie downstream in the secretory pathway rather than insulin biosynthesis.


Cell Transplantation | 2018

The Flaws and Future of Islet Volume Measurements

Han-Hung Huang; Stephen Harrington; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

When working with isolated islet preparations, measuring the volume of tissue is not a trivial matter. Islets come in a large range of sizes and are often contaminated with exocrine tissue. Many factors complicate the procedure, and yet knowledge of the islet volume is essential for predicting the success of an islet transplant or comparing experimental groups in the laboratory. In 1990, Ricordi presented the islet equivalency (IEQ), defined as one IEQ equaling a single spherical islet of 150 μm in diameter. The method for estimating IEQ was developed by visualizing islets in a microscope, estimating their diameter in 50 μm categories and calculating a total volume for the preparation. Shortly after its introduction, the IEQ was adopted as the standard method for islet volume measurements. It has helped to advance research in the field by providing a useful tool improving the reproducibility of islet research and eventually the success of clinical islet transplants. However, the accuracy of the IEQ method has been questioned for years and many alternatives have been proposed, but none have been able to replace the widespread use of the IEQ. This article reviews the history of the IEQ, and discusses the benefits and failings of the measurement. A thorough evaluation of alternatives for estimating islet volume is provided along with the steps needed to uniformly move to an improved method of islet volume estimation. The lessons learned from islet researchers may serve as a guide for other fields of regenerative medicine as cell clusters become a more attractive therapeutic option.


Acta Diabetologica | 2013

A replacement for islet equivalents with improved reliability and validity

Han-Hung Huang; Lisa Stehno-Bittel

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Karen Kover

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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