October 27, 2016

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Normal insulin rhythm restored in mouse pancreas cells by glucose pulse

Composite diagram illustrating the microfluidic device used in the study, the glucose waveform applied to the islets, and the mathematical explanation for why glucose oscillations can trigger insulin pulses. Credit: Bertram et al.
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Composite diagram illustrating the microfluidic device used in the study, the glucose waveform applied to the islets, and the mathematical explanation for why glucose oscillations can trigger insulin pulses. Credit: Bertram et al.

Pulses of the sugar glucose can restore normal insulin release in mouse pancreas cells that have been exposed to excess glucose, according to a study published in PLOS Computational Biology. This finding could improve understanding of high blood sugar, also known as hyperglycemia, which is a hallmark of Type 2 diabetes.

In a healthy person, pancreas cells known as regulate by releasing pulses of insulin into the bloodstream. These pulses curb glucose output from the liver and prompt tissues throughout the body to absorb glucose. In a person with hyperglycemia, however, exposure to excess glucose deactivates the beta cell "clock" that sets the rhythm of insulin pulses, and not enough insulin is produced.

In the new study, Joseph McKenna and colleagues from Florida State University developed a mathematical model that suggests pulses of glucose could potentially restart the insulin clock in beta cells that have been exposed to excess glucose. To put this prediction to the test, they removed groups of beta cells, called of Langerhans, from non-diabetic mice and placed them in a small chamber. A specially engineered device then exposed the islets to controlled microfluidic flows of a glucose solution.

The researchers found that high, steady glucose concentrations deactivated the beta cell insulin clock in the mouse islets. However, controlled pulses of glucose reactivated the clock. The scientists also found that reactivated islets could recruit and reactivate other islets when the glucose solution flow was controlled by a feedback loop that mimics the action of the liver.

"This article demonstrates how microfluidics and mathematical modeling can be used together to gain new insights into the mechanisms for hormone secretion," says study co-author Richard Bertram.

Future research will use similar techniques to study islets from diabetic mice, as well as islets from both diabetic and non-diabetic people.

More information: McKenna JP, Dhumpa R, Mukhitov N, Roper MG, Bertram R (2016) Glucose Oscillations Can Activate an Endogenous Oscillator in Pancreatic Islets. PLoS Comput Biol 12(10): e1005143. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005143

Journal information: PLoS Computational Biology

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