Abnormal regulation of glucagon secretion by human islet alpha cells in the absence of beta cells.
Citation | Liu, Wei, et al. “Abnormal Regulation of Glucagon Secretion by Human Islet Alpha Cells in the Absence of Beta Cells”. 2019. EBioMedicine, vol. 50, 2019, pp. 306–316. |
Center | Columbia University |
Author | Wei Liu, Tatsuya Kin, Siuhong Ho, Craig Dorrell, Sean R Campbell, Ping Luo, Xiaojuan Chen |
Keywords | Cell-to-cell contact, Glibenclamide, Human alpha cells glucagon, Insulin inhibition, Paracrine regulation, Somatostatin |
Abstract |
BACKGROUND: The understanding of the regulation of glucagon secretion by pancreatic islet α-cells remains elusive. We aimed to develop an in vitro model for investigating the function of human α-cells under direct influence of glucose and other potential regulators. METHODS: Highly purified human α-cells from islets of deceased donors were re-aggregated in the presence or absence of β-cells in culture, evaluated for glucagon secretion under various treatment conditions, and compared to that of intact human islets and non-sorted islet cell aggregates. FINDINGS: The pure human α-cell aggregates maintained proper glucagon secretion capability at low concentrations of glucose, but failed to respond to changes in ambient glucose concentration. Addition of purified β-cells, but not the secreted factors from β-cells at low or high concentrations of glucose, partly restored the responsiveness of α-cells to glucose with regulated glucagon secretion. The EphA stimulator ephrinA5-fc failed to mimic the inhibitory effect of β-cells on glucagon secretion. Glibenclamide inhibited glucagon secretion from islets and the α- and β-mixed cell-aggregates, but not from the α-cell-only aggregates, at 2.0 mM glucose. INTERPRETATION: This study validated the use of isolated and then re-aggregated human islet cells for investigating α-cell function and paracrine regulation, and demonstrated the importance of cell-to-cell contact between α- and β-cells on glucagon secretion. Loss of proper β- and α-cell physical interaction in islets likely contributes to the dysregulated glucagon secretion in diabetic patients. Re-aggregated select combinations of human islet cells provide unique platforms for studying islet cell function and regulation. |
Year of Publication |
2019
|
Journal |
EBioMedicine
|
Volume |
50
|
Number of Pages |
306-316
|
Date Published |
12/2019
|
ISSN Number |
2352-3964
|
DOI |
10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.11.018
|
Alternate Journal |
EBioMedicine
|
PMID |
31780397
|
PMCID |
PMC6921359
|
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