Abstract
Pancreatic islet B cell function was studied in vitro using three structurally different preparations of islet tissues: isolated, intact islets, dispersed islet cells attached singly to microcarrier beads, and reaggregated islet cells. Mechanisms of intercellular communication are eliminated with single cell preparations, whereas in aggregates cell to cell communications are reestablished and a defined microenvironment restored. Perifusion studies measured nonstimulated and glucose- and arginine-stimulated insulin release from the three islet tissues. Insulin secretion rates were expressed as a function of cellular DNA content, permitting direct comparison between tissues. During perifusion with low (2.8 or 5.5 mM) glucose concentrations, secretion rates of single islet cells were up to 6-fold greater (P less than 0.001) than those of intact islets. Perifusion of islet cells with 2.8 mM glucose and 100 or 500 pg glucagon/ml had no effect whereas GH-release-inhibiting factor (330 and 1000 pg/ml) decreased nonstimulated insulin secretion rates by 15% (P less than 0.05). After reaggregation, basal insulin secretion rates were restored toward those of intact islets. Glucose (5.5-30 mM) and L-arginine (5-20 mM) elicited first phase insulin responses from single islet cells that were not significantly different from those observed with intact islets; in contrast, second phase responses of single islets to glucose were approximately 50% those seen with intact islets, and their second phase responses to arginine were absent. Single islet cell first and second phase insulin responses to 5.5 mM glucose were enhanced 2.2-fold (P less than 0.01) and 2.8-fold (P less than 0.05), respectively, in the presence of exogenous glucagon, resulting in secretory profiles characteristic of intact islets. Reaggregation of single islet cells was associated with markedly increased first and second phase insulin responses to both glucose and arginine stimulation. These data show that disruption of the islet microanatomy results in alteration of insulin secretory responses and that these effects can be reversed, in part by exogenous glucagon and GH-release-inhibiting factor, and by reaggregation. Although different mechanisms appear important for nonstimulated, first and second phase insulin release, the findings support a role for both direct intercellular communication and hormonal secretion by islet A and D cells in the modulation of B cell function.
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