Islets of Langerhans
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Islets of Langerhans
A porcine islet of Langerhans. The left image is a brightfield image created using hematoxylin stain; nuclei are dark circles and the acinar pancreatic tissue is darker than the islet tissue. The right image is the same section stained by immunofluorescence against insulin, indicating beta cells.
Cell typesHormones produced in the Islets of Langerhans are secreted directly into the blood flow by (at least) five different types of cells:[1]
Electrical activityElectrical activity of pancreatic islets has been studied using patch clamp techniques, and it has turned out that the behavior of cells in intact islets differs significantly from the behavior of dispersed cells[3]. As a treatment for type I diabetesBecause the beta cells in the islets of Langerhans are destroyed in type I diabetes, clinicians and researchers are actively pursuing islet transplantation technology as a means of curing this disease[4]. Rachel Harris, islet cell recipient, was transplanted at the Diabetes Research Institute in Miami, Florida. In June of 2004, Rachel became the world's longest surviving insulin-free diabetic according to the Miami Herald (published Feb. 13, 2004).[5] Islet transplantation currently requires potent immunosuppression to prevent host rejection of donor islets. An alternative source of beta cells, such an islets derived from adult stem cells or progenitor cells of a diabetic would eliminate the need for immuosuppressive therapy, and be safer for diabetics.[6]. TransplantationIslet cell transplantation has the possibility of restoring beta cells and curing diabetes. The Chicago Project headed at University of Illinois at Chicago Medical Center is investigating ways to regenerate beta cells in vivo. With that being said, beta cells experience apoptosis early and thus are destroyed within a normal-functioning pancreas. The source of this seems to come from the transfer of Pander, a gene that works by attaching to RNA[7]. Pander, when active, causes the beta cells to be blocked at S phase, which induces apoptosis. This loss of beta cell mass eventually leads to a loss of most of the transplanted beta cells. References in pop culture
GalleryHormones/Islet Architecture <gallery> Image:PancreaticPolypeptide.jpg|Mouse islet immunostained for pancreatic polypeptide. Image:InsulinIHC.jpg|Mouse islet immunostained for insulin. Image:Glucagon.jpg|Mouse islet immunostained for glucagon. </gallery> ReferencesExternal links
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