View Related Documents

Abstract

Pancreatic β-cells, responsible for the synthesis and secretion of insulin in response to a glucose challenge, are located in the islets of Langerhans. Islets are comprised of a heterogeneous population of endocrine cells, including insulin-producing β-cells (approx. 65–70%), glucagon-secreting α-cells (20–25%), somatostatin-secreting δ-cells, and polypeptide (PP)-secreting cells. Much of the cellular and biochemical information concerning the mechanisms by which glucose stimulates insulin secretion by pancreatic β-cells has been obtained in studies using islets isolated from rodents (1). Rat islets provide an ideal source of insulin-producing tissue to study pancreatic β-cell function as insulin secretion by rat islets closely parallels insulin secretion by human islets and it is possible to obtain a large number of islets (300–600) from a single rat pancreas. With the widespread development of transgenic and gene knockout models, mouse islets represent an ideal system to study specific changes in gene expression on β-cell function. In this chapter, the methods that we routinely use to isolate islets from rat and mouse pancreata are described.

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document