首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
The cells within the intact islet of Langerhans function as a metabolic syncytium, secreting insulin in a coordinated and oscillatory manner in response to external fuel. With increased glucose, the oscillatory amplitude is enhanced, leading to the hypothesis that cells within the islet are secreting with greater synchronization. Consequently, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM; type 2 diabetes)-induced irregularities in insulin secretion oscillations may be attributed to decreased intercellular coordination. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether the degree of metabolic coordination within the intact islet was enhanced by increased glucose and compromised by NIDDM. Experiments were performed with isolated islets from normal and diabetic Psammomys obesus. Using confocal microscopy and the mitochondrial potentiometric dye rhodamine 123, we measured mitochondrial membrane potential oscillations in individual cells within intact islets. When mitochondrial membrane potential was averaged from all the cells in a single islet, the resultant waveform demonstrated clear sinusoidal oscillations. Cells within islets were heterogeneous in terms of cellular synchronicity (similarity in phase and period), sinusoidal regularity, and frequency of oscillation. Cells within normal islets oscillated with greater synchronicity compared with cells within diabetic islets. The range of oscillatory frequencies was unchanged by glucose or diabetes. Cells within diabetic (but not normal) islets increased oscillatory regularity in response to glucose. These data support the hypothesis that glucose enhances metabolic coupling in normal islets and that the dampening of oscillatory insulin secretion in NIDDM may result from disrupted metabolic coupling.  相似文献   

2.
In contrast to pancreatic islets, isolated beta-cells stimulated by glucose display irregular and asynchronous increases in cytoplasmic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)). Here, clusters of 5-30 cells were prepared from a single mouse islet or from pools of islets, loaded with fura-2, and studied with a camera-based system. [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations were compared in pairs of clusters by computing the difference in period and a synchronization index lambda. During perifusion with 12 mM glucose, the clusters exhibited regular [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations that were quasi-perfectly synchronized (Delta period of 1.4% and index lambda close to 1.0) between cells of each cluster. In contrast, separate clusters were not synchronized, even when prepared from one single islet. Pairs of clusters neighboring on the same coverslip were not better synchronized than pairs of clusters examined separately (distinct coverslips). We next attempted to synchronize clusters perifused with 12 mM glucose by applying external signals. A single pulse of 20 mM glucose, 10 mM amino acids, or 10 microM tolbutamide transiently altered [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations but did not reset the clusters to oscillate synchronously. On a background of 12 mM glucose, repetitive applications (1 min/5 min) of 10 microM tolbutamide, but not of 20 mM glucose, synchronized separate clusters. Our results identify a level of beta-cell heterogeneity intermediate between single beta-cells and the whole islet. They do not support the idea that substances released by islet cells serve as paracrine synchronizers. However, synchronization can be achieved by an external signal, if this signal has a sufficient strength to overwhelm the intrinsic rhythm of glucose-induced oscillations and is repetitively applied.  相似文献   

3.
Insulin secretion from pancreatic beta-cells is pulsatile with a period of 5-10 min and is believed to be responsible for plasma insulin oscillations with similar frequency. To observe an overall oscillatory insulin profile it is necessary that the insulin secretion from individual beta-cells is synchronized within islets, and that the population of islets is also synchronized. We have recently developed a model in which pulsatile insulin secretion is produced as a result of calcium-driven electrical oscillations in combination with oscillations in glycolysis. We use this model to investigate possible mechanisms for intra-islet and inter-islet synchronization. We show that electrical coupling is sufficient to synchronize both electrical bursting activity and metabolic oscillations. We also demonstrate that islets can synchronize by mutually entraining each other by their effects on a simple model "liver," which responds to the level of insulin secretion by adjusting the blood glucose concentration in an appropriate way. Since all islets are exposed to the blood, the distributed islet-liver system can synchronize the individual islet insulin oscillations. Thus, we demonstrate how intra-islet and inter-islet synchronization of insulin oscillations may be achieved.  相似文献   

4.
Insulin secretion in the intact organism, and by the perfused pancreas and groups of isolated perifused islets, is pulsatile. We have proposed a metabolic model of glucose-induced insulin secretion in which oscillations in the ATP/ADP ratio drive alterations in metabolic and electrical events that lead to insulin release. A key prediction of our model is that metabolically driven Ca2+ oscillations will also occur. Using the fluorescent Ca2+ probe, fura 2, digital image analysis, and sensitive O2 electrodes, we investigated cytosolic free Ca2+ responses and O2 consumption in perifused rat islets that had been maintained in culture for 1-4 days. We found that elevated ambient glucose increased the average cytosolic free Ca2+ level, the ATP/ADP ratio, and oxygen consumption, as previously found in freshly isolated islets. Oscillatory patterns were obtained for Ca2+, O2 consumption, and insulin secretion in the presence of 10 and 20 mM glucose. Very low amplitude oscillations in cytosolic free Ca2+ were observed at 3 mM nonstimulatory glucose levels. Evaluation of the Ca2+ responses of a large series of individual islets, monitored by digital image analysis and perifused at both 3 and 10 mM glucose, indicated that the rise in glucose concentration caused more than a doubling of the average cytosolic free Ca2+ value and a 4-fold increase in the amplitude of the oscillations with little change in period. The pattern of Ca2+ change within the islets was consistent with recruitment of responding cells. The coexistence of oscillations with similar periods in insulin secretion, oxygen consumption, and cytosolic free Ca2+ is consistent with the model of metabolically driven pulsatile insulin secretion.  相似文献   

5.
Individual mouse pancreatic islets exhibit oscillations in [Ca2+]i and insulin secretion in response to glucose in vitro, but how the oscillations of a million islets are coordinated within the human pancreas in vivo is unclear. Islet to islet synchronization is necessary, however, for the pancreas to produce regular pulses of insulin. To determine whether neurohormone release within the pancreas might play a role in coordinating islet activity, [Ca2+]i changes in 4-6 isolated mouse islets were simultaneously monitored before and after a transient pulse of a putative synchronizing agent. The degree of synchronicity was quantified using a novel analytical approach that yields a parameter that we call the “Synchronization Index”. Individual islets exhibited [Ca2+]i oscillations with periods of 3-6 min, but were not synchronized under control conditions. However, raising islet [Ca2+]i with a brief application of the cholinergic agonist carbachol (25 μM) or elevated KCl in glucose-containing saline rapidly synchronized islet [Ca2+]i oscillations for ≥30 min, long after the synchronizing agent was removed. In contrast, the adrenergic agonists clonidine or norepinephrine, and the KATP channel inhibitor tolbutamide, failed to synchronize islets. Partial synchronization was observed, however, with the KATP channel opener diazoxide. The synchronizing action of carbachol depended on the glucose concentration used, suggesting that glucose metabolism was necessary for synchronization to occur. To understand how transiently perturbing islet [Ca2+]i produced sustained synchronization, we used a mathematical model of islet oscillations in which complex oscillatory behavior results from the interaction between a fast electrical subsystem and a slower metabolic oscillator. Transient synchronization simulated by the model was mediated by resetting of the islet oscillators to a similar initial phase followed by transient “ringing” behavior, during which the model islets oscillated with a similar frequency. These results suggest that neurohormone release from intrapancreatic neurons could help synchronize islets in situ. Defects in this coordinating mechanism could contribute to the disrupted insulin secretion observed in Type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

6.
Glucose oxidation to CO2 was investigated in isolated perifused rat epididymal fat cells. Insulin stimulated rates of oxidation up to 30-fold. Multiple pulses of insulin or prolonged perifusion with the hormone led to a time-dependent desensitization of the cells. The action of insulin could be mimicked by H2O2. Reversal of H2O2 effects was associated with a damped oscillation of large initial amplitude. Initiation of perifusion with insulin induced rates of glucose oxidation that oscillated around a mean elevated rate with an amplitude of about +/- 4% of the mean, significantly larger than the measurement error. Basal rates did not show clear oscillations. The oscillations after insulin had a statistically significant period of around 14 min. The results were the same with C1- or C6-labeled glucose and occurred in the presence of both 0.275 and 5.5 mM glucose in the perifusion medium. The oscillations were interpreted as the result of insulin- or H2O2-induced synchronization of oscillatory glycolysis by individual fat cells. The similarity of the observed oscillatory period with the period of oscillatory insulin secretion by pancreatic beta cells suggests that oscillatory glycolysis may constitute the internal pacemaker for the latter process.  相似文献   

7.
Insulin is released from the pancreas in pulses with a period of ∼ 5 min. These oscillatory insulin levels are essential for proper liver utilization and perturbed pulsatility is observed in type 2 diabetes. What coordinates the many islets of Langerhans throughout the pancreas to produce unified oscillations of insulin secretion? One hypothesis is that coordination is achieved through an insulin-dependent negative feedback action of the liver onto the glucose level. This hypothesis was tested in an in vitro setting using a microfluidic system where the population response from a group of islets was input to a model of hepatic glucose uptake, which provided a negative feedback to the glucose level. This modified glucose level was then delivered back to the islet chamber where the population response was again monitored and used to update the glucose concentration delivered to the islets. We found that, with appropriate parameters for the model, oscillations in islet activity were synchronized. This approach demonstrates that rhythmic activity of a population of physically uncoupled islets can be coordinated by a downstream system that senses islet activity and supplies negative feedback. In the intact animal, the liver can play this role of the coordinator of islet activity.  相似文献   

8.
Insulin is released from the pancreas in pulses with a period of ∼ 5 min. These oscillatory insulin levels are essential for proper liver utilization and perturbed pulsatility is observed in type 2 diabetes. What coordinates the many islets of Langerhans throughout the pancreas to produce unified oscillations of insulin secretion? One hypothesis is that coordination is achieved through an insulin-dependent negative feedback action of the liver onto the glucose level. This hypothesis was tested in an in vitro setting using a microfluidic system where the population response from a group of islets was input to a model of hepatic glucose uptake, which provided a negative feedback to the glucose level. This modified glucose level was then delivered back to the islet chamber where the population response was again monitored and used to update the glucose concentration delivered to the islets. We found that, with appropriate parameters for the model, oscillations in islet activity were synchronized. This approach demonstrates that rhythmic activity of a population of physically uncoupled islets can be coordinated by a downstream system that senses islet activity and supplies negative feedback. In the intact animal, the liver can play this role of the coordinator of islet activity.  相似文献   

9.
Congenital nystagmus (CN) is a disorder of the ocular motility characterized by oscillatory eye movements preventing the correct fixation of a target. Many typical waveforms of eye position recordings have been recognized and classified in the literature: in jerk CN a slow phase eye movement is followed by a fast phase, giving rise to a typical saw-tooth waveform, while in pendular CN the eyes exhibit a periodic motion, giving rise to an approximately sinusoidal waveform. Dual jerk waveforms seemed to show small, rapid oscillations superimposed on a jerk-like waveform, thus being originary classified as a mixture of jerk and pendular CN. On the contrary, a theoretical model of CN has appeared recently, which suggests a possible interpretation of the small amplitude oscillations in dual jerk waveforms as consecutive pieces of growing and decaying exponentials.By spectral analysis of dual jerk waveforms in a number of patients with CN, we show that the oscillations are truly sinusoidal in nature, thus suggesting the possibility of a different explanation of dual jerk waveforms in CN.Preliminary results of this work were presented at XIV ICMP —International Congress of Medical Physics, Espoo, Finland, 11–16 August 1985  相似文献   

10.
Glucose stimulation of insulin release involves metabolism of the sugar and elevation of cytoplasmic calcium (Ca2+i) in pancreatic B-cells. We compared the dynamic changes of metabolism (fluorescence of endogenous reduced pyridine nucleotides, NAD(P)H), membrane potential (intracellular microelectrodes), and Ca2+i (fura-2 technique), in intact mouse islets. Glucose (15 mM) sequentially triggered an increase in NAD(P)H fluorescence, a depolarization with electrical activity, and a rise in Ca2+i. The change in NAD(P)H was monophasic and regular, whereas the changes in membrane potential and Ca2+i were multiphasic, with steady-state regular oscillations of similar average frequencies (about 2.2/min). Digital image analysis revealed that Ca2+i oscillations were synchronous in all regions of the islets. Omission of extracellular Ca2+ abolished the rise in Ca2+i but not the increase in NAD(P)H. Both electrical and Ca2+i oscillations disappeared in low external Ca2+ (1 mM), and became larger but slower in high Ca2+ (10 mM). Sustained depolarization (by tolbutamide, arginine, or high K+) and hyperpolarization (by diazoxide) of B-cells caused sustained increases and decreases of Ca2+i, respectively. In conclusion, the changes in membrane potential induced by various secretagogues trigger synchronous changes in Ca2+i in all B-cells of the islets. The oscillatory pattern of the electrical and Ca2+i responses induced by glucose is not accompanied by and thus probably not due to similar oscillations of metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
Pancreatic islets of Langerhans display complex intracellular calcium changes in response to glucose that include fast (seconds), slow ( approximately 5 min), and mixed fast/slow oscillations; the slow and mixed oscillations are likely responsible for the pulses of plasma insulin observed in vivo. To better understand the mechanisms underlying these diverse patterns, we systematically analyzed the effects of glucose on period, amplitude, and plateau fraction (the fraction of time spent in the active phase) of the various regimes of calcium oscillations. We found that in both fast and slow islets, increasing glucose had limited effects on amplitude and period, but increased plateau fraction. In some islets, however, glucose caused a major shift in the amplitude and period of oscillations, which we attribute to a conversion between ionic and glycolytic modes (i.e., regime change). Raising glucose increased the plateau fraction equally in fast, slow, and regime-changing islets. A mathematical model of the pancreatic islet consisting of an ionic subsystem interacting with a slower metabolic oscillatory subsystem can account for these complex islet calcium oscillations by modifying the relative contributions of oscillatory metabolism and oscillatory ionic mechanisms to electrical activity, with coupling occurring via K(ATP) channels.  相似文献   

12.
Glucose stimulation of pancreatic beta cells induces oscillations of the membrane potential, cytosolic Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](i)), and insulin secretion. Each of these events depends on glucose metabolism. Both intrinsic oscillations of metabolism and repetitive activation of mitochondrial dehydrogenases by Ca(2+) have been suggested to be decisive for this oscillatory behavior. Among these dehydrogenases, mitochondrial glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (mGPDH), the key enzyme of the glycerol phosphate NADH shuttle, is activated by cytosolic [Ca(2+)](i). In the present study, we compared different types of oscillations in beta cells from wild-type and mGPDH(-/-) mice. In clusters of 5-30 islet cells and in intact islets, 15 mM glucose induced an initial drop of [Ca(2+)](i), followed by an increase in three phases: a marked initial rise, a partial decrease with rapid oscillations and eventually large and slow oscillations. These changes, in particular the frequency of the oscillations and the magnitude of the [Ca(2+)] rise, were similar in wild-type and mGPDH(-/-) mice. Glucose-induced electrical activity (oscillations of the membrane potential with bursts of action potentials) was not altered in mGPDH(-/-) beta cells. In single islets from either type of mouse, insulin secretion strictly followed the changes in [Ca(2+)](i) during imposed oscillations induced by pulses of high K(+) or glucose and during the biphasic elevation induced by sustained stimulation with glucose. An imposed and controlled rise of [Ca(2+)](i) in beta cells similarly increased NAD(P)H fluorescence in control and mGDPH(-/-) islets. Inhibition of the malate-aspartate NADH shuttle with aminooxyacetate only had minor effects in control islets but abolished the electrical, [Ca(2+)](i) and secretory responses in mGPDH(-/-) islets. The results show that the two distinct NADH shuttles play an important but at least partially redundant role in glucose-induced insulin secretion. The oscillatory behavior of beta cells does not depend on the functioning of mGPDH and on metabolic oscillations that would be generated by cyclic activation of this enzyme by Ca(2+).  相似文献   

13.
A novel oxygen microsensor was used to measure oxygen levels in single mouse islets as a function of glucose concentration. Oxygen consumption of individual islets was 5.99 +/- 1.17, 9.21 +/- 2.15, and 12.22 +/- 2.16 pmol/min at 3, 10, and 20 mM glucose, respectively (mean +/- SEM, n = 10). Consumption of oxygen was islet-size dependent as larger islets consumed more oxygen than smaller islets but smaller islets consumed more oxygen per unit volume than larger islets. Elevating glucose levels from 3 to 10 mM induced pronounced fast oscillations in oxygen level (period of 12.1 +/- 1.7 s, n = 6) superimposed on top of large slow oscillations (period of 3.3 +/- 0.6 min, n = 6). The fast oscillations could be completely abolished by treatment with the L-type Ca2+-channel blocker nifedipine (40 microM) with a lesser effect on slow oscillations. Slow oscillations were almost completely dependent upon extracellular Ca2+. The oxygen patterns closely mimic those that have previously been reported for intracellular Ca2+ levels and are suggestive of an important role for Ca2+ in amplifying metabolic oscillations.  相似文献   

14.
Nitric oxide (NO) is believed to play an important role in pancreatic islet physiology and pathophysiology. Research in this area has been hampered, however, by the use of indirect methods to measure islet NO. To investigate the role of NO in islet function, we positioned NO-sensitive, recessed-tip microelectrodes in close proximity to individual islets and monitored oxidation current to detect subnanomolar NO in the bath. NO release from islets consisted of a series of rapid bursts lasting several seconds and/or slow oscillations with a period of approximately 100-300 s. Average baseline NO near the islets in 2.8 mM glucose was 524+/-59 nM (n=12). Raising glucose from 2.8 to 11.1 mM augmented NO release by 429+/-133 nM (n=12, P<0.05), an effect blocked by the NO synthase inhibitor L-NAME (n=3). We also observed that glucose-stimulated increases in NO release were contemporaneous with changes in NAD(P)H and O2 but occurred well before increases in calcium associated with glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. In summary, we demonstrate that NO release from islets is oscillatory and rapidly augmented by glucose, suggesting that NO release occurs early following an increase in glucose metabolism and may contribute to the stimulated insulin secretion triggered by suprathreshold glucose.  相似文献   

15.
Intracellular Ca2+ levels were monitored in single, acutely isolated mouse islets of Langerhans by dual emission Indo-1 fluorometry. High-frequency (3.1 min-1) [Ca2+]i oscillations with a brief rising time (1-2 s) and 10 s half-width ('fast' oscillations) were detected in 11 mM glucose. Raising the glucose concentration to 16.7 mM increased the duration of these oscillations, which were otherwise absent in 5.5 mM glucose. [Ca2+]i waves of lower frequency (0.5 min-1) and longer rising time ('slow' oscillations) were also recorded. The data indicate that "fast" oscillations are directly related to beta-cell bursting electrical activity, and suggest the existence of extensive networks of electrically coupled cells in the islet.  相似文献   

16.
Insulin is secreted in discrete insulin secretory bursts. Regulation of insulin release is accomplished almost exclusively by modulation of insulin pulse mass, whereas the insulin pulse interval remains stable at approximately 4 min. It has been reported that in vivo insulin pulses can be entrained to a pulse interval of approximately 10 min by infused glucose oscillations. If oscillations in glucose concentration play an important role in the regulation of pulsatile insulin secretion, abnormal or absent glucose oscillations, which have been described in type 2 diabetes, might contribute to the defective insulin secretion. Using perifused human islets exposed to oscillatory vs. constant glucose, we questioned 1) whether the interval of insulin pulses released by human islets is entrained to infused glucose oscillations and 2) whether the exposure of islets to oscillating vs. constant glucose confers an increased signal for insulin secretion. We report that oscillatory glucose exposure does not entrain insulin pulse frequency, but it amplifies the mass of insulin secretory bursts that coincide with glucose oscillations (P < 0.001). Dose-response analyses showed that the mode of glucose drive does not influence total insulin secretion (P = not significant). The apparent entrainment of pulsatile insulin to infused glucose oscillations in nondiabetic humans in vivo might reflect the amplification of underlying insulin secretory bursts that are detected as entrained pulses at the peripheral sampling site, but without changes in the underlying pacemaker activity.  相似文献   

17.
Thapsigargin (TG), a blocker of Ca(2+) uptake by the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), was used to evaluate the contribution of the organelle to the oscillations of cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](c)) induced by repetitive Ca(2+) influx in mouse pancreatic beta-cells. Because TG depolarized the plasma membrane in the presence of glucose alone, extracellular K(+) was alternated between 10 and 30 mM in the presence of diazoxide to impose membrane potential (MP) oscillations. In control islets, pulses of K(+), mimicking regular MP oscillations elicited by 10 mM glucose, induced [Ca(2+)](c) oscillations whose nadir remained higher than basal [Ca(2+)](c). Increasing the depolarization phase of the pulses while keeping their frequency constant (to mimic the effects of a further rise of the glucose concentration on MP) caused an upward shift of the nadir of [Ca(2+)](c) oscillations that was reproduced by raising extracellular Ca(2+) (to increase Ca(2+) influx) without changing the pulse protocol. In TG-pretreated islets, the imposed [Ca(2+)](c) oscillations were of much larger amplitude than in control islets and occurred on basal levels. During intermittent trains of depolarizations, control islets displayed mixed [Ca(2+)](c) oscillations characterized by a summation of fast oscillations on top of slow ones, whereas no progressive summation of the fast oscillations was observed in TG-pretreated islets. In conclusion, the buffering capacity of the ER in pancreatic beta-cells limits the amplitude of [Ca(2+)](c) oscillations and may explain how the nadir between oscillations remains above baseline during regular oscillations or gradually increases during mixed [Ca(2+)](c) oscillations, two types of response observed during glucose stimulation.  相似文献   

18.
Pancreatic islets produce pulses of insulin and other hormones that maintain normal glucose homeostasis. These micro-organs possess exquisite glucose-sensing capabilities, allowing for precise changes in pulsatile insulin secretion in response to small changes in glucose. When communication among these cells is disrupted, precision glucose sensing falters. We measured intracellular calcium patterns in 6-mM-steps between 0 and 16 mM glucose, and also more finely in 2-mM-steps from 8 to 12 mM glucose, to compare glucose sensing systematically among intact islets and dispersed islet cells derived from the same mouse pancreas in vitro. The calcium activity of intact islets was uniformly low (quiescent) below 4 mM glucose and active above 8 mM glucose, whereas dispersed beta-cells displayed a broader activation range (2-to-10 mM). Intact islets exhibited calcium oscillations with 2-to-5-min periods, yet beta-cells exhibited longer 7–10 min periods. In every case, intact islets showed changes in activity with each 6-mM-glucose step, whereas dispersed islet cells displayed a continuum of calcium responses ranging from islet-like patterns to stable oscillations unaffected by changes in glucose concentration. These differences were also observed for 2-mM-glucose steps. Despite the diversity of dispersed beta-cell responses to glucose, the sum of all activity produced a glucose dose-response curve that was surprisingly similar to the curve for intact islets, arguing against the importance of “hub cells” for function. Beta-cells thus retain many of the features of islets, but some are more islet-like than others. Determining the molecular underpinnings of these variations could be valuable for future studies of stem-cell-derived beta-cell therapies.  相似文献   

19.
Regulation of glucose-induced oscillations in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) was investigated by using a novel technique, electroporation from an electrolyte-filled capillary, to deliver energy metabolites to the intracellular compartment of mouse islets. Intracellular application of ATP resulted in a nifedipine-sensitive increase in [Ca2+]i, consistent with a KATP-channel dependent mechanism of Ca2+ influx. [Ca2+]i in islets exposed to 10 mM glucose oscillated with a period of approximately 3 min, often superimposed with faster oscillations. Electroporation of ATP blocked all types of oscillations and elevated [Ca2+]i while delivery of ADP had no effect on oscillations. Intracellular delivery of glucose-6-phosphate or fructose-1,6-bisphosphate tended to transform slow oscillations to fast oscillations. These results demonstrate that modulation of ATP concentrations and glycolytic flux are important in development of slow oscillations.  相似文献   

20.
Qian WJ  Peters JL  Dahlgren GM  Gee KR  Kennedy RT 《BioTechniques》2004,37(6):922-4, 926, 928-30 passim
A method for simultaneously imaging Zn2+ secretion and intracellular Ca2+ at beta-cell clusters and single islets of Langerhans was developed. Cells were loaded with the Ca2+ indicator Fura Red, incubated in buffer containing the Zn2+ indicator FluoZin-3, and imaged via laser scanning fluorescence confocal microscopy. FluoZin-3 and Fura Red are excited at 488 nm and emit at 515 and 665 nm, respectively. Zn2+, which is co-released with insulin, reacts with extracellular FluoZin-3 to form a fluorescent product. Stimulation of cell clusters with glucose evoked increases and oscillations in intracellular Ca2+ and Zn2+ secretion that were correlated with each other and were synchronized among cells. In single islets, spatially resolved dynamics of secretion including detection of first phase, second phase, and synchronized oscillations around the islet were observed. Fura Red did not yield detectable Ca2+ signals at islets. For islet measurements, cells were loaded with Fura-2 and incubated in FluoZin-3 while sequentially illuminating the islets with 340, 380, and 470 nm light and acquiring epi-fluorescence images with a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera. This allowed Ca2+ and secretion to be observed with approximately 2 s temporal resolution. This method should be useful for studying Ca2+ secretion coupling and any application, requiring rapid assays of secretion.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号