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1.
Antibodies to insulin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide hormone and somatostatin were utilized to demonstrate the cellular localization of the hormones in pancreatic tissue of fetal guinea pig of advanced gestation by immunofluorescence histochemistry. The topographical distribution of the 4 endocrine cell types was compared with those of the adult pancreas and was found to be significantly different particularly for cells immunostaining for insulin, glucagon and somatostatin. These observations suggest changes in histogenesis of pancreatic endocrine cells during transition from fetal to postnatal and adult life. The presence of the 4 islet hormones in the fetal pancreas of this species implies that they may be important in fetal metabolism and growth.  相似文献   

2.
Polyhormonal aspect of the endocrine cells of the human fetal pancreas   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Histological studies were performed on 30 pancreases obtained from normal human fetuses aged between the 9th and 38th week. For immunocytochemistry, the avidin-biotin-peroxidase method was used to identify and colocalise insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, pancreatic polypeptide and proliferating cell nuclear antigen. In the 9th week, cells containing all investigated peptides were present. During the fetal period, two populations of endocrine cells have been distinguished, Langerhans islets and freely dispersed cells. The free cells were polyhormonal, containing insulin, glucagon, somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide, and were localised in the walls of pancreatic ducts throughout the whole gland. During the development of the islets we have observed four stages: (1) the scattered polyhormonal cell stage (9th–10th week), (2) the immature polyhormonal islet stage (11th–15th week), (3) the insulin monohormonal core islet stage (16th–29th week), in which zonular and mantle islets are observed, and (4) the polymorphic islet stage (from the 30th week onwards), which is characterised by the presence of monohormonal cells expressing glucagon or somatostatin. Bigeminal and polar islets also appeared during this last stage. The islets consisted of an insulin core surrounded by a thick (in the part developing from the dorsal primordium) or thin rim (part of the pancreas concerned with the ventral primordium) of intermingled mono- or dihormonal glucagon-positive or somatostatin-positive cells. The most externally located polyhormonal cells exhibited a reaction for glucagon, somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide. Apart from the above-mentioned types of islets, all arrangements observed in earlier stages were present. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen-positive cells (single in the large islets and more numerous in the smaller ones) were predominantly observed in the outermost layer. Taken together our data indicate that, during the human prenatal development of the islet, endocrine cells are able to synthesise several different hormones. Maturation of these cells involved or depended on a change from a polyhormonal to a monohormonal state and is concerned with decreasing proliferative capacity. This supports the concept of a common precursor stem cell for the hormone-producing cells of the fetal human pancreas. Accepted: 1 June 1999  相似文献   

3.
Antibodies to insulin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide hormone (PP) and somatostatin were used in the immunofluorescence histochemical procedure to study the ontogeny of pancreatic endocrine cells containing the four hormones in the bovine fetus of approximately 100 days gestation to term. Pancreatic sections from the bovine neonate and adult were also examined for the cellular distribution of the four hormones. Immunoreactive cells staining for insulin, glucagon, PP and somatostatin were present in the pancreas of all fetuses studied. Each endocrine cell type displayed a characteristic distribution within the developing pancreas and in the neonate and adult. The presence of the four islet hormones relatively early in bovine fetal life suggests that they may be important in intra- and extra-islet metabolism in the fetus.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The endocrine pancreas of the Australian fattailed dunnart, Sminthopsis crassicaudata, was investigated by means of electron-microscopic immunocytochemistry using the protein A-gold technique on London resin (LR) white-embedded tissue. The primary antibodies used were raised against insulin, glucagon, somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide. The morphology of the secretory granules differed in the four cell types. The insulin cells are pleomorphic, and the secretory granules composed of an electron-dense core surrounded by an electron-lucen halo. The glucago cells possess granules with an electron-dense core usually surrounded by a halo of less dense granular material. Somatostatin cells have large, less dense secretory granules. The pancreatic polypeptide cells show small, dense secretory granules. In order for an ultrastructural study to be considered reliable for the definite identification of endocrine cell types, it is essential that it be corroborated by immunocytochemical data at the light-or preferably electron-microscopic level. Recent developments in immuno-electron-microscopic techniques have contributed to a better knowledge of cells responsible for the secretion of a wide variety of hormones, as in this study.  相似文献   

5.
In the fetal development of the mouse pancreas, endocrine cells have been found that express more than one hormone simultaneously. Our objective was to evaluate the existence of such cells in the human fetal pancreas. We found cells coexpressing two of the major pancreatic hormones (insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin) in sections of eight midgestational (12-18 weeks) pancreata and in 0-7% of cells in single-cell suspensions from midgestational pancreata. By electron microscopy, using granule morphology and immunoelectron microscopic techniques, we could confirm these findings and even detect cells containing three hormones. Morphologically different granules contained different immunoreactivities, suggesting parallel regulation of hormone production and packaging. In six newborn pancreata (born after 22-40 weeks of gestation), we could not find any multiple-hormone-containing cells. Subsequently, we evaluated whether multiple-hormone-containing cells proliferate by using pancreatic fragments and single-cell preparations at the light and electron microscopic level (six pancreata). No endocrine hormone-containing cells incorporated bromodeoxyuridine during a 1-hr culture period, indicating that these cells have lost the ability to proliferate under the conditions chosen. We conclude that, as in mice, the human fetal pancreas of 12-18 weeks of gestation contains endocrine cells that express multiple hormones simultaneously. These (multiple) hormone-containing cells do not seem to proliferate under basal conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Glucagon, insulin, somatostatin, and pancreatic polypeptide have been localized in the anolian pancreas using peroxidase-antiperoxidase immunocytochemistry. The most abundant endocrine cell type contains glucagon. Insulin-containing cells are the next most numerous. Somatostatin-immunoreactive cells tend to be localized at the periphery of the islet cords. Pancreatic polypeptide-containing cells are a minor endocrine component scattered throughout the exocrine pancreas and occasionally within the islet areas. No staining was observed after application of antigastrin serum.  相似文献   

7.
Endocrine cells require several protein convertases to process the precursors of hormonal peptides that they secrete. In addition to the convertases, which have a crucial role in the maturation of prohormones, many other proteases are present in endocrine cells, the roles of which are less well established. Two of these proteases, dipeptidyl peptidase IV (EC 3.4.14.5) and membrane dipeptidase (EC 3.4.13.19), have been immunocytochemically localized in the endocrine pancreas of the pig. Membrane dipeptidase was present exclusively in cells of the islet of Langerhans that were positive for the pancreatic polypeptide, whereas dipeptidyl peptidase IV was restricted to cells positive for glucagon. Both enzymes were observed in the content of secretory granules and therefore would be released into the interstitial space as the granules undergo exocytosis. At this location they could act on secretions of other islet cells. The relative concentration of dipeptidyl peptidase IV was lower in dense glucagon granules, where the immunoreactivity to glucagon was higher, and vice versa for light granules. This suggests that, in A-cells, dipeptidyl peptidase IV could be sent for degradation in the endosomal/lysosomal compartment during the process of granule maturation or could be removed from granules for continuous release into the interstitial space. The intense proteolytic activity that takes place in the endocrine pancreas could produce many potential dipeptide substrates for membrane dipeptidase. (J Histochem Cytochem 47:489-497, 1999)  相似文献   

8.
Insulin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide hormone (PP) and somatostatin immunoreactive cells were demonstrated in the islet of the goat pancreas by the immunofluorescence procedure. Islet cells showing immunostaining for the hormones appeared to have a characteristic distribution. The demonstration of PP and somatostatin within the pancreas of the goat suggests they may be significant in modulating intra- and extra-islet function in this ruminant species.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The endocrine pancreas of the grey kangaroo,Macropus fuliginosus, was investigated by means of immunocytochemistry using the PAP method on the same section at the light- and electron-microscopic levels. Semithin plastic sections were stained individually with primary antibodies for insulin, glucagon, somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide (PP), and then photographed. Sections were osmicated, re-embedded in BEEM capsules, and ultrathin sections made and examined. The same labelled cells as in the semithin sections were localised in the thin sections, photographs taken and the morphology of secretory granules studied. The insulin cells were pleomorphic; their secretory granules displayed an electron-dense core surrounded by an empty halo. The glucagon cells possessed granules with an electron-dense core usually surrounded by a halo of less dense granular material. Somatostatin cells had larger, less dense secretory granules. The PP cells showed small, dense secretory granules. In order for an ultrastructural study to be considered reliable for the definite identification of endocrine cell types, it is essential that it be corroborted by correlated immunocytochemical data at the light-and electron-microscopic levels.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Morphological features of the endocrine cells in the duct system of the pancreas and the biliary tract have been recently characterized in the adult animal with respect to their physiological roles. In the present study, we have investigated their chronological appearance as well as their developmental progress at various stages of the rat fetal and postnatal life. On day 12 of gestation, glucagon and insulin, as well as CCK cells, were identified in the pancreatic primordium. On day 14, glucagon and CCK cells were first detected in the epithelial lining of the common hepatic and the hepatic ducts. These cells remained the dominant endocrine type in the duct system during the fetal period. Insulin and pancreatic polypeptide cells were first observed in the common hepatic duct only on days 16 and 18 of gestation respectively. In spite of their presence in the islets, somatostatin cells were not detected in the duct system during fetal life. They started to appear in the accessory pancreatic duct of the neonate, and subsequently in the common hepatic duct as well as in the small pancreatic ones on day 7 after birth. During postnatal development, the endocrine cells showed progressive or retrogressive changes in different portions of the duct system according to the cell type. In general, somatostatin, CCK and pancreatic polypeptide cells showed an increase, while glucagon and insulin cells gradually dwindled in number up to the adult stage. Somatostatin cells exhibited a significant increase in number, becoming the highest population among the duct endocrine cells in the adult. Throughout the developmental progress, the endocrine cells appear to be allocated in regions relevant to their possible influence modulating the exocrine secretion as well as the drainage of the pancreatic and bile fluid. To whom correspondence should be address.  相似文献   

11.
The parenchymal cells of the islets of Langerhans belong to the extensive human neuroendocrine system. Its messenger substances are biogenic amines and neurohormonal peptides. Like other neuroendocrine cells, the islet cells might have originated from the neural crest. However, in the fetal life, their stem cells are located in the epithelium of the pancreatic ductuli. As early as at the 8th gestational week, these stem cells have been found to contain secretory granules of the neuroendocrine type. Evidences for production of insulin, somatostatin, glucagon, and PP (the pancreatic polypeptide) have been obtained immunohistochemically in the samples from the 10–12th gestational weeks. In the samples from the 14th week, cell clusters have been observed, which are outgrowing from the ductular epithelium and forming primitive Langerhans islets. The insulin cells predominate markedly and are shown to respond functionally to glucose stimulation. By the 16th week, the islets become vascularized, with the primary innervation. The completely formed endocrine pancreas, as it is observed at birth, is revealed at the 26th gestational week. Based on some light-microscopical, ultrastructural, and immunohistochemical characteristics of the islet parenchymal cells and their supply with blood vessels and nerves, three phases of the gland embryonal/fetal development are identified.  相似文献   

12.
Of paramount importance for the development of cell therapies to treat diabetes is the production of sufficient numbers of pancreatic endocrine cells that function similarly to primary islets. We have developed a differentiation process that converts human embryonic stem (hES) cells to endocrine cells capable of synthesizing the pancreatic hormones insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, pancreatic polypeptide and ghrelin. This process mimics in vivo pancreatic organogenesis by directing cells through stages resembling definitive endoderm, gut-tube endoderm, pancreatic endoderm and endocrine precursor--en route to cells that express endocrine hormones. The hES cell-derived insulin-expressing cells have an insulin content approaching that of adult islets. Similar to fetal beta-cells, they release C-peptide in response to multiple secretory stimuli, but only minimally to glucose. Production of these hES cell-derived endocrine cells may represent a critical step in the development of a renewable source of cells for diabetes cell therapy.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Rats rendered diabetic by streptozotocin were subjected to pancreas transplantation. After twenty weeks, the duct-ligated pancreas transplant was studied morphometrically to determine the effect of duct occlusion on the various cell populations of the islets. Concomitantly, the streptozotocin-treated host pancreas was examined for a possible influence of the graft on the diabetic pattern of islet cell population. Twenty weeks after pancreas transplantation, the volume fractions of insulin, glucagon, somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide cells in the graft islets did not differ from those of the normal control pancreas. In the pancreas of nontransplanted diabetic rats, insulin-positive B cells were reduced from 60–65% to less than 10% of the islet volume, whereas non-B cells were significantly increased in volume density. The changes in fractional volume of the various islet cells correlated fairly well with changes in plasma concentration of the corresponding pancreas hormones. In the recipient's own pancreas, the relative volumes of glucagon and somatostatin cells were unaffected by the pancreas transplant. However, the insulin cell mass was significantly increased, and comprised about 20% of the islet volume, while cells containing pancreatic polypeptide were found only sporadically.Supported by Nordic Insulin Fund, The Swedish Diabetes Association, and MFR, proj. no. 4499. The technical assistance by M. Maxe and M. Carlesson is gratefully acknowledged  相似文献   

14.
By immunofluorescence on cytospin preparations and on semithin sections of mouse pancreatic buds, we have found glucagon and pancreatic polypeptide (PP)-containing cells at embryonal day 10.5 (E 10.5) in dorsal buds and at E 11.5 in ventral buds. Insulin-containing cells appear in dorsal buds at E 11.5, and one to two days later in ventral buds. Somatostatin-containing cells are detectable from E 13.5 in both dorsal and ventral buds. A quantitative analysis shows that up to E 15.5, PP-containing cells are relatively abundant in both buds. By PCR amplification of oligo(dT)-primed cDNAs prepared from total pancreatic RNA, we also detect PP mRNA from E 10.5 onwards, thus confirming the early expression of the PP gene in the developing mouse pancreas. Analysis of endocrine cells in situ suggests three major patterns of cell distribution in embryonic pancreas. First, individual hormone-containing cells are located within the epithelium of pancreatic ducts. In both dorsal and ventral buds, the majority of these endocrine cells contain PP, but many also contain glucagon, insulin or somatostatin. Secondly, clusters of endocrine cells are found in the pancreatic interstitium. Many of these cells contain both glucagon and PP which, by immunogold labelling of consecutive thin sections, can be shown to co-exist within individual secretory granules. Finally, starting on E 18.5, typical islets are formed with centrally located B cells and with the adult 'one cell-one hormone' phenotype. These results suggest an intriguing ontogenic relationship between A- and PP-cells, and also indicate that PP-containing cells may occupy a hitherto unexpected place in the lineage of endocrine islet cells.  相似文献   

15.
Four major pancreatic hormones were immunolocalized at the light and electron microscopic levels in the pancreas of the Nile crocodile, Crocodilus niloticus. Immunogold was used for electron microscopy, and peroxidase-antiperoxidase was used for light microscopy. Somatostatin-positive D-cells and pancreatic polypeptide-containing F-cells accounted for about 60% of the immunoreactive cells in the ventral pancreas. Glucagon-positive A-cells were the least frequent cell type in the ventral pancreas, about 15%, but were the predominant cell type, about 40%, in the pancreas that was dorsal in character. An expanded population of D-cells (relative to mammals and other higher vertebrates) in association with two very different numbers of A-cells can be expected to have important consequences for the homotropic control of secretory activity of the endocrine pancreas as well as for the function of the acinar pancreas. F-cells were absent from the dorsal part of the pancreas, whereas insulin-containing B-cells were slightly more abundant in this portion of the pancreas. The regional character of the endocrine pancreas was related to the complex looping of the proximal small intestine. Without immunolabeling, only B-granules were morphognomonic in electron micrographs. The insulin-reactive B-granules were the smallest (370 nm) of the secretory granules and were followed in size by somatostatin-positive D-granules (380 nm). The pancreatic polypeptide-containing secretory granules were the largest (580 nm). Glucagon-reactive A-granules (430 nm) sometimes exhibited a protuberance or extension of secretory granule matrix and limiting membrane. Such a morphological feature has previously been associated with secretion of glucagon and the initiation of insulin secretion. Taken together these studies indicate that protuberances have a significant, but as yet undefined, role in pancreatic endocrine cells.  相似文献   

16.
Pancreastatin is a 49 amino acid comprising peptide isolated from porcine pancreas that is derived by proteolytic processing from chromogranin A. Using an antibody against the synthetic C-terminal fragment pancreastatin (33-49), we examined the light and electron microscopical immunocytochemical localization of this peptide in porcine tissues. Pancreastatin-like immunoreactivity (PLI) was found in pancreatic somatostatin-, insulin- and glucagon cells in varying intensities; pancreatic polypeptide cells were always negative. At the electron microscopical (EM) level the immunoreactivity was confined to the electron dense core of the secretory granules in the case of somatostatin and insulin cells or to the less electron dense "halo" of the glucagon granules. In the antrum PLI positive cells represented gastrin (G), somatostatin (D) and enterochromaffin (EC) cells, in the duodenum in addition to EC- and G-cells a small number of PLI positive cells showed a positive immunoreaction for glucagon-like peptide (GLP) I and secretin in serial sections. Both norepinephrine and epinephrine containing cells of the adrenal medulla exhibited a strong reaction for PLI. In the pituitary several cell populations stained with varying intensities, including gonadotrophs and thyrotrophys. PLI is present in a distinct and characteristic subpopulation of neuroendocrine cells in various organs. The subcellular localization may indicate a function in the granular concentration, packaging and storage of peptides and amines in the brain-gut endocrine system.  相似文献   

17.
The gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) endocrine system of bowfin (Amia calva) was described using light and electron microscopy and immunological methods. The islet organ (endocrine pancreas) consists of diffusely scattered, mostly small islets and isolated patches of cells among and within the exocrine acini. The islets are composed of abundant, centrally located B cells immunoreactive to bovine and lamprey insulin antisera and D cells showing a widespread distribution and specificity to somatostatin antibodies. A and F cells are present at the very periphery of the islets and are immunoreactive with antisera against glucagon (and glucagon-like peptide) and several peptides of the pancreatic polypeptide (PP)-family, respectively. The peptides of the two families usually collocates within the same peripheral islet cells and are the most common immunoreactive peptides present in the extra-islet tissue. Immunocytochemistry and fine structural observations characterised the granule morphology for B and D cells and identified two cell types with granules immunoreactive to glucagon antisera. These two putative A cells had similar granules, which were distinct from either B or D cells, but one of the cells had rod-shaped cytoplasmic inclusions within cisternae of what appeared to be rough endoplasmic reticulum. The inclusions were not immunoreactive to either insulin or glucagon antisera. Only small numbers of cells in the stomach and intestine immunoreacted to antisera against somatostatin, glucagon, and PP-family peptides. The paucity of these cells was reflected in the low concentrations of these peptides in intestinal extracts. The GEP system of bowfin is not unlike that of other actinopterygian fishes, but there are some marked differences that may reflect the antiquity of this system and/or may be a consequence of the ontogeny of this system in this species.  相似文献   

18.
Four monoclonal antibodies specific for somatostatin have been produced and characterized. These antibodies were used to assess the anatomical relationship of somatostatin-containing cells in the pancreas and gastrointestinal tract of man, baboon and rat with ten other peptide-containing endocrine cells. The peptides investigated were gastrin, cholecystokinin, motilin, secretin, neurotensin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide, gut-glucagon, pancreatic glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide and insulin. The only regions in which somatostatin cells were seen in close contact with another endocrine cell were in the pancreas and the gastric antrum. In the pancreas somatostatin cells were commonly seen in close contact with insulin, glucagon and pancreatic polypeptide cells and infrequent contact was demonstrable with the gastrin-immunoreactive cells in the antrum of both rat and man. In all other cases no evidence was obtained for a close anatomical relationship between somatostatin cells and the other enteroendocrine cells.  相似文献   

19.
Chromogranin A (CGA) is the major soluble protein within secretory vesicles of chromaffin cells. A polyclonal antiserum was raised against bovine CGA and characterized in two-dimensional immunoblots. Cellular and subcellular distribution of CGA in bovine pancreatic islet was investigated by immunocytochemistry. At the light microscopic level, CGA-like immunoreactivity was found in the same cells that react with antibodies against insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin. A minority of cells containing pancreatic polypeptide also showed faint immunostaining. At the ultrastructural level (protein A-gold technique), CGA-like immunoreactivity was confined exclusively to the secretory vesicles. Whereas the hormones were localized mainly in the central part of the secretory vesicles, CGA was present predominantly in the periphery. These findings indicate that a CGA-like protein is a regular constituent of the matrix of secretory vesicles in pancreatic endocrine cells.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Four monoclonal antibodies specific for somatostatin have been produced and characterized. These antibodies were used to assess the anatomical relationship of somatostatin-containing cells in the pancreas and gastrointestinal tract of man, baboon and rat with ten other peptide-containing endocrine cells. The peptides investigated were gastrin, cholecystokinin, motilin, secretin, neurotensin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide, gut-glucagon, pancreatic glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide and insulin.The only regions in which somatostatin cells were seen in close contact with another endocrine cell were in the pancreas and the gastric antrum. In the pancreas somatostatin cells were commonly seen in close contact with insulin, glucagon and pancreatic polypeptide cells and infrequent contact was demonstrable with the gastrin-immunoreactive cells in the antrum of both rat and man. In all other cases no evidence was obtained for a close anatomical relationship between somatostatin cells and the other enteroendocrine cells.  相似文献   

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