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Co-ordinated Ca(2+)-signalling within pancreatic islets: does beta-cell entrainment require a secreted messenger.
Squires, P E; Persaud, S J; Hauge-Evans, A C; Gray, E; Ratcliff, H; Jones, P M.
Afiliación
  • Squires PE; Molecular Physiology, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK. psquires@bio.warwick.ac.uk
Cell Calcium ; 31(5): 209-19, 2002 May.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12098223
ABSTRACT
Isolated beta-cells are heterogeneous in sensory, biosynthetic and secretory capabilities, however, to enable efficient and appropriate secretion, cellular activity within the intact islet is synchronised. Historically, the entrainment of activity to a common pattern has been attributed to gap-junction mediated cell-to-cell communication. Although clearly influential, the possibility remains for other local synchronising mechanisms. In this study, we have used small clusters of insulin-secreting MIN6 cells to assess how contact-dependent, homotypic interactions between cells influences nutrient- and non-nutrient- evoked Ca(2+)-handling and insulin secretion, and to determine whether a secreted product plays a role in the synchronisation of oscillatory activity. Tolbutamide evoked a concentration-dependent recruitment of active cells within cell clusters, both in terms of numbers of cells and amplitude of the evoked Ca(2+)-response. The change in [Ca(2+)](i) was characteristically oscillatory above a mean elevated plateau, and was in phase between member cells of an individual cluster. Even at maximal concentrations (100 microM) some cells within a cluster responded before their immediate neighbours. Subsequent oscillatory behaviour then became entrained between member cells within that cluster. Inhibiting exocytosis using the microtubule inhibitors vincristine and nocodazole, or the adrenergic agent noradrenaline, did not prevent tolbutamide-evoked oscillatory changes in [Ca(2+)](i) but did reduce the probability of obtaining synchronous activity within an individual cluster. Above a threshold glucose concentration, the number of cells secreting insulin increased, without a commensurate change in secretory efficiency. This recruitment of cells secreting insulin mirrored Ca(2+) data that showed a glucose-dependent increase in cell number, without a change in the mean basal-to-peak change in [Ca(2+)](i). Together these data suggest that synchronised behaviour in MIN6 cells is dependent, in part, on a secreted factor that acts in a local paracrine fashion to recruit heterogeneous individual cellular activity into an organised group response.
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Bases de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Comunicación Celular / Calcio / Islotes Pancreáticos / Señalización del Calcio / Insulina Límite: Animals / Humans Idioma: En Revista: Cell Calcium Año: 2002 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Reino Unido
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Bases de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Comunicación Celular / Calcio / Islotes Pancreáticos / Señalización del Calcio / Insulina Límite: Animals / Humans Idioma: En Revista: Cell Calcium Año: 2002 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Reino Unido