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Abnormal regulation of glucagon secretion by human islet alpha cells in the absence of beta cells.

Citation
Liu, W., et al. “Abnormal Regulation Of Glucagon Secretion By Human Islet Alpha Cells In The Absence Of Beta Cells.”. Ebiomedicine, 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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