Increased Islet Volume but Unchanged Islet Number in ob/ob Mice
- 1 July 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 52 (7) , 1716-1722
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.52.7.1716
Abstract
It is important for our understanding of the pancreatic islets to study whether new islets are able to form in the intact pancreas. We developed a new method to determine the total number and the mean volume of the pancreatic islets, and we used this method to study the expansion of the islet mass in ob/ob mice (n = 8), using ob/+ mice (n = 8) as controls. The total islet volume was increased by a factor of 3.6 in ob/ob mice compared with ob/+ mice, whereas, importantly, the total number of islets did not differ among ob/ob mice and ob/+ mice (3,193 ± 160 islets in ob/ob mice vs. 3,184 ± 142 islets in ob/+ mice, P = 0.97). The coefficient of variation in the volume distribution of islets was equal in the two groups, showing that in ob/ob mice, the existing islets expand their volume by the same proportion, without a net formation of new islets. We suggest that the pancreatic islets should be considered as anatomically such complex structures that islet neogenesis does not spontaneously occur in an intact pancreas. Cells within the existing islets are presumably the most important sources for islet cell hyperplasia during expansion of the total islet mass.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pancreatic stem cellsThe Journal of Pathology, 2002
- Initiation of Increased Pancreatic Islet Growth in Young Normoglycemic Mice (Umea +/?)Endocrinology, 1999
- Weight-Reducing Effects of the Plasma Protein Encoded by the obese GeneScience, 1995
- A second pathway for regeneration of adult exocrine and endocrine pancreas. A possible recapitulation of embryonic developmentDiabetes, 1993
- Compensatory growth of pancreatic beta-cells in adult rats after short-term glucose infusionDiabetes, 1989
- Stereology of arbitrary particles*Journal of Microscopy, 1986
- The unbiased estimation of number and sizes of arbitrary particles using the disectorJournal of Microscopy, 1984
- Estimation of nuclear population from microtome sectionsThe Anatomical Record, 1946
- THE CORPUSCLE PROBLEM. SECOND MEMOIR CASE OF ELLIPSOIDAL CORPUSCLESBiometrika, 1926
- THE CORPUSCLE PROBLEM. A MATHEMATICAL STUDY OF A BIOMETRIC PROBLEMBiometrika, 1925