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Dynamic Uni- and Multicellular Patterns Encode Biphasic Activity in Pancreatic Islets
Author(s) -
Ma Jaffredo,
Éléonore Bertin,
Antoine Pirog,
Emilie Puginier,
Julien Gaitan,
Sandra Ouchérif,
Fanny Lebreton,
Domenico Bosco,
Bogdan Catargi,
Daniel Cattaert,
Sylvie Renaud,
Jochen Lang,
Matthieu Raoux
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
diabetes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.219
H-Index - 330
eISSN - 1939-327X
pISSN - 0012-1797
DOI - 10.2337/db20-0214
Subject(s) - multicellular organism , islet , glucose homeostasis , biology , pancreatic islets , microbiology and biotechnology , glucagon , neuroscience , coupling (piping) , cell type , cell , medicine , endocrinology , diabetes mellitus , insulin , biochemistry , insulin resistance , materials science , metallurgy
Biphasic secretion is an autonomous feature of many endocrine micro-organs to fulfill physiological demands. The biphasic activity of islet β-cells maintains glucose homeostasis and is altered in type 2 diabetes. Nevertheless, underlying cellular or multicellular functional organizations are only partially understood. High-resolution noninvasive multielectrode array recordings permit simultaneous analysis of recruitment, of single-cell, and of coupling activity within entire islets in long-time experiments. Using this unbiased approach, we addressed the organizational modes of both first and second phase in mouse and human islets under physiological and pathophysiological conditions. Our data provide a new uni- and multicellular model of islet β-cell activation: during the first phase, small but highly active β-cell clusters are dominant, whereas during the second phase, electrical coupling generates large functional clusters via multicellular slow potentials to favor an economic sustained activity. Postprandial levels of glucagon-like peptide 1 favor coupling only in the second phase, whereas aging and glucotoxicity alter coupled activity in both phases. In summary, biphasic activity is encoded upstream of vesicle pools at the micro-organ level by multicellular electrical signals and their dynamic synchronization between β-cells. The profound alteration of the electrical organization of islets in pathophysiological conditions may contribute to functional deficits in type 2 diabetes.

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