β-Cell Glucose Sensitivity Is Linked to Insulin/Glucagon Bihormonal Cells in Nondiabetic Humans

Context: Insulin resistance impacts virtually all tissues, including pancreatic β cells. Individuals with insulin resistance, but without diabetes, exhibit an increased islet size because of an elevated number of both β and α cells. Neogenesis from duct cells and transdifferentiation of α cells have...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism 2016-02, Vol.101 (2), p.470-475
Hauptverfasser: Mezza, Teresa, Sorice, Gian P, Conte, Caterina, Sun, Vinsin A, Cefalo, Chiara M. A, Moffa, Simona, Pontecorvi, Alfredo, Mari, Andrea, Kulkarni, Rohit N, Giaccari, Andrea
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Context: Insulin resistance impacts virtually all tissues, including pancreatic β cells. Individuals with insulin resistance, but without diabetes, exhibit an increased islet size because of an elevated number of both β and α cells. Neogenesis from duct cells and transdifferentiation of α cells have been postulated to contribute to the β-cell compensatory response to insulin resistance. Objective: Our objective was to explore parameters that could potentially predict altered islet morphology. Methods: We investigated 16 nondiabetic subjects by a 2-hour hyperglycemic clamp to evaluate β-cell secretory function. We analyzed pancreas samples obtained during pancreatoduodenectomy in the same patients to examine glucagon and insulin double+ cells to assess islet morphology. Results: Among all the functional in vivo parameters of insulin secretion that were explored (basal, first phase and total secretion, glucose sensitivity, arginine-stimulated insulin secretion), β-cell glucose sensitivity was unique in exhibiting a significant correlation with both islet size and α-β double+ islet cells. Conclusions: Our data suggest that poor β-cell glucose sensitivity is linked to islet transdifferentiation, possibly from α cells to β cells, in an attempt to cope with higher demands for insulin secretion. Understanding the mechanism(s) that underlies the adaptive response of the islet cells to insulin resistance is a potential approach to design tools to enhance functional β-cell mass for diabetes therapy.
ISSN:0021-972X
1945-7197
DOI:10.1210/jc.2015-2802