Molecular Metabolism (Oct 2018)

Individual islet respirometry reveals functional diversity within the islet population of mice and human donors

  • Evan P. Taddeo,
  • Linsey Stiles,
  • Samuel Sereda,
  • Eleni Ritou,
  • Dane M. Wolf,
  • Muhamad Abdullah,
  • Zachary Swanson,
  • Josh Wilhelm,
  • Melena Bellin,
  • Patrick McDonald,
  • Kacey Caradonna,
  • Andrew Neilson,
  • Marc Liesa,
  • Orian S. Shirihai

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16
pp. 150 – 159

Abstract

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Objective: Islets from the same pancreas show remarkable variability in glucose sensitivity. While mitochondrial respiration is essential for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, little is known regarding heterogeneity in mitochondrial function at the individual islet level. This is due in part to a lack of high-throughput and non-invasive methods for detecting single islet function. Methods: We have developed a novel non-invasive, high-throughput methodology capable of assessing mitochondrial respiration in large-sized individual islets using the XF96 analyzer (Agilent Technologies). Results: By increasing measurement sensitivity, we have reduced the minimal size of mouse and human islets needed to assess mitochondrial respiration to single large islets of >35,000 μm2 area (∼210 μm diameter). In addition, we have measured heterogeneous glucose-stimulated mitochondrial respiration among individual human and mouse islets from the same pancreas, allowing population analyses of islet mitochondrial function for the first time. Conclusions: We have developed a novel methodology capable of analyzing mitochondrial function in large-sized individual islets. By highlighting islet functional heterogeneity, we hope this methodology can significantly advance islet research. Keywords: Islets, Mitochondria, Respirometry, Glucose