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Insulin inhibits its own secretion from isolated, perifused human pancreatic islets

Authors :
E. Finke
B. J. Olack
P. E. Lacy
D. W. Scharp
C. J. Swanson
Rosa Giannarelli
M. Mclear
Piero Marchetti
Renzo Navalesi
Source :
Acta Diabetologica. 32:75-77
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1995.

Abstract

It is still a controversial question whether insulin suppresses its own secretion. We prepared pure human islets from three pancreases by collagenase digestion and density gradient purification. Aliquots of 200 islet equivalents (IE, 150-μm sized-islets) were sequentially perifused at 37°C with 3.3 mmol/l glucose (3.3G, 40 min), 16.7 mmol/l glucose (16.7G, 30 min) and again 3.3G (30 min) after 24 h, 37°C culture in CMRL 1066 medium with or without the addition of either 200 or 400 μU/ml human insulin in the incubation medium (6 replicates each). Insulin secretion was assessed by C-peptide (Cp) measurement in the perufusate. Without added insulin (C) and with 200 (Ins200) or 400 (Ins400) μU/ml added insulin, basal Cp release was 0.12±0.03, 0.14±0.02 and 0.14±0.04 ng/ml, respectively. At 16.7G, the first-phase secretion peak (expressed as Cp value) was significantly lower with Ins200 (0.47±0.13 ng/ml,P

Details

ISSN :
14325233 and 09405429
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Diabetologica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9e6738f508d30cb9c24480c9b0c05ee8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00569560