Islets of Langerhans
From Freepedia
The endocrine (i.e. hormone-producing) cells of the pancreas are grouped in the so-called Islets of Langerhans. Discovered in 1869 by the German pathological anatomist Paul Langerhans (1847-1888), the Islets of Langerhans constitute 1-2% of the mass of the pancreas. There are about one million islets in a healthy adult human, and their combined weight is 1 to 1.5 grams. Each islet contains approximately one thousand cells and is 50-500 um in diameter.
Hormones produced in the Islets of Langerhans are secreted directly into the blood flow by (at least) four different types of cells:
- 65-80% of the islet cells are insulin-producing beta cells.
- The second most abundant cell type is the glucagon-releasing alpha cells (15-20%).
Additionally, Islets of Langerhans contain
- somatostatin-producing delta cells (3-10%)
- and pancreatic polypeptide-containing PP cells (1%).
Islets can influence each other through paracrine and autocrine communication, and beta-cells are coupled electrically to beta-cells (but not to other cell-types!).
The paracrine feed-back system of the Islets of Langerhans has the following structure:
- Insulin: Activates beta-cells, inhibits alpha-cells.
- Glucagon: Activates beta-cells and delta-cells.
- Somatostatin: Inhibits alpha-cells and beta-cells.
Electrical activity of pancreatic islets has been studied using the patch-clamp technique, and it has turned out that the behaviour of cells in intact islets differs significantly from the behaviour of dispersed cells
| Endocrine system - pancreas | Edit |
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Islets of Langerhans - alpha cell - beta cell - delta cell - PP cell |



