Clonal insulinβsecreting BRINβBD11 cells engineered by electrofusion were encapsulated inside natrium alginate beads and cultured in RPMI 1640 culture media. Acute insulin secretory responses to glucose and amino acids were compared between microencapsulated cells and nonβencapsulated cells maintain
Desensitization of the insulin-secreting beta cell
β Scribed by Gerold M. Grodsky; Janice L. Bolaffi
- Book ID
- 102878630
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 900 KB
- Volume
- 48
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0730-2312
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In human diabetes, inherent impaired insulin secretion can be exacerbated by desensitization of the @ cell by chronic hyperglycemia. Interest in this phenomenon has generated extensive studies in genetic or experimentally induced diabetes in animals and in fully in vitro systems, with often conflicting results. In general, although chronic glucose causes decreased @-cell response to this carbohydrate, basal response and response to alternate stimulating agents are enhanced. Glucose-stimulated insulin synthesis can be increased or decreased depending on the system studied. Using a two-compartment @-cell model of phasic insulin secretion, a unifying hypothesis is described which can explain some of the apparent conflicting data. This hypothesis suggests that glucose-desensitization is caused by an impairment in stimulation of a hypothetical potentiator singularly responsible for: 1 ) some of the characteristic phases of insulin secretion; 2) basal release; 3) potentiation of non-glucose stimulators; and 4) apparent "recovery" from desensitization. Review of some of the pathways that regulate insulin secretion suggest that phosphoinositol metabolism and protein kinase-C production are regulated similarly to the theoretical potentiator and their impairment is a major contributor to glucose desensitization in the @ cell.
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