DGIST New Biology

Research

  • Home News Research

Spatial and temporal coordination of insulin granule exocytosis in int…

admin 0 557

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00125-015-3747-9


Joana Almaça, Tao Liang, Herbert Y. Gaisano, Hong Gil Nam, Per-Olof Berggren, Alejandro Caicedo

 

Received: 29 May 2015; Accepted: 12 August 2015; Published: 16 September 2015.

 

Abstract
Aims/hypothesis
Insulin secretion is widely studied because it plays a central role in glucose homeostasis and diabetes. Processes from insulin granule fusion in beta cells to in vivo insulin secretion have been elucidated, but data at the cellular level do not fully account for several aspects of the macroscopic secretory pattern. Here we investigated how individual secretory events are coordinated spatially and temporally within intact human islets.

Methods
We used the fluorescent probe neuropeptide Y (NPY)–pHluorin to visualise insulin granule secretion in isolated intact human islets.

Results
We found that individual beta cells respond to increases in glucose concentration by releasing insulin granules in very discrete bursts with periods consistent with in vivo pulsatile insulin secretion. In successive secretory bursts during prolonged exposure to high glucose levels, secretory events progressively localised to preferential release sites, coinciding with the transition to second phase insulin secretion. Granule secretion was very synchronised in neighbouring beta cells, forming discrete regional clusters of activity.

Conclusions/interpretation
These results reveal how individual secretory events are coordinated to produce pulsatile insulin secretion from human islets.

 

Keywords: Exocytosis; Human islets; Insulin granule; Pulsatile secretion;

 

Link: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00125-015-3747-9

 

  • 페이스북으로 보내기
  • 트위터로 보내기
  • 구글플러스로 보내기
  • 카카오스토리로 보내기
  • 네이버밴드로 보내기