Similar to other endocrine glands, the endocrine pancreas displays a characteristic topography of its constituent cells. The functional significance of this structural organization was examined by measuring the secretory activity of the B cell in rat islet cell preparations of different composition. Glucose released 30-fold more insulin from B cells lodged within intact islets as from purified single B cells; structurally coupled B cells and single B cells isolated with A cells or incubated with glucagon responded 4- and 2-fold, respectively, more effectively to glucose than single B cells alone. Glucose homeostasis is thus dependent not only on the number and integrity of the insulin-containing B cells but also on their interactions with neighboring B and non-B cells. This study provides direct support for the concept that the microanatomy of the islet creates the anatomical basis for functional cooperation between islet cells and hence for an appropriate glucose-induced insulin release.
CITATION STYLE
Pipeleers, D., In’t Veld, P., Maes, E., & Van De Winkel, M. (1982). Glucose-induced insulin release depends on functional cooperation between islet cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 79(23 I), 7322–7325. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.79.23.7322
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