Skip to main content
  • More from ADA
    • Diabetes Care
    • Clinical Diabetes
    • Diabetes Spectrum
    • ADA Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes
    • ADA Scientific Sessions Abstracts
    • BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care
  • Subscribe
  • Log in
  • My Cart
  • Follow ada on Twitter
  • RSS
  • Visit ada on Facebook
Diabetes

Advanced Search

Main menu

  • Home
  • Current
    • Current Issue
    • Online Ahead of Print
    • ADA Scientific Sessions Abstracts
  • Browse
    • By Topic
    • Issue Archive
    • Saved Searches
    • ADA Scientific Sessions Abstracts
    • Diabetes COVID-19 Article Collection
    • Diabetes Symposium 2020
  • Info
    • About the Journal
    • About the Editors
    • ADA Journal Policies
    • Instructions for Authors
    • Guidance for Reviewers
  • Reprints/Reuse
  • Advertising
  • Subscriptions
    • Individual Subscriptions
    • Institutional Subscriptions and Site Licenses
    • Access Institutional Usage Reports
    • Purchase Single Issues
  • Alerts
    • E­mail Alerts
    • RSS Feeds
  • Podcasts
    • Diabetes Core Update
    • Special Podcast Series: Therapeutic Inertia
    • Special Podcast Series: Influenza Podcasts
    • Special Podcast Series: SGLT2 Inhibitors
    • Special Podcast Series: COVID-19
  • Submit
    • Submit a Manuscript
    • Submit Cover Art
    • ADA Journal Policies
    • Instructions for Authors
    • ADA Peer Review
  • More from ADA
    • Diabetes Care
    • Clinical Diabetes
    • Diabetes Spectrum
    • ADA Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes
    • ADA Scientific Sessions Abstracts
    • BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care

User menu

  • Subscribe
  • Log in
  • My Cart

Search

  • Advanced search
Diabetes
  • Home
  • Current
    • Current Issue
    • Online Ahead of Print
    • ADA Scientific Sessions Abstracts
  • Browse
    • By Topic
    • Issue Archive
    • Saved Searches
    • ADA Scientific Sessions Abstracts
    • Diabetes COVID-19 Article Collection
    • Diabetes Symposium 2020
  • Info
    • About the Journal
    • About the Editors
    • ADA Journal Policies
    • Instructions for Authors
    • Guidance for Reviewers
  • Reprints/Reuse
  • Advertising
  • Subscriptions
    • Individual Subscriptions
    • Institutional Subscriptions and Site Licenses
    • Access Institutional Usage Reports
    • Purchase Single Issues
  • Alerts
    • E­mail Alerts
    • RSS Feeds
  • Podcasts
    • Diabetes Core Update
    • Special Podcast Series: Therapeutic Inertia
    • Special Podcast Series: Influenza Podcasts
    • Special Podcast Series: SGLT2 Inhibitors
    • Special Podcast Series: COVID-19
  • Submit
    • Submit a Manuscript
    • Submit Cover Art
    • ADA Journal Policies
    • Instructions for Authors
    • ADA Peer Review
Pathophysiology

Human Insulinomas Show Distinct Patterns of Insulin Secretion In Vitro

  1. Jean-Claude Henquin1⇑,
  2. Myriam Nenquin1,
  3. Yves Guiot2,
  4. Jacques Rahier2 and
  5. Christine Sempoux2
  1. 1Unit of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Faculty of Medicine, University of Louvain, Brussels, Belgium
  2. 2Department of Pathology, University Clinics Saint Luc, Faculty of Medicine, University of Louvain, Brussels, Belgium
  1. Corresponding author: Jean-Claude Henquin, jean-claude.henquin{at}uclouvain.be.
Diabetes 2015 Oct; 64(10): 3543-3553. https://doi.org/10.2337/db15-0527
PreviousNext
  • Article
  • Figures & Tables
  • Suppl Material
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF
Loading

Abstract

Insulinomas are β-cell tumors that cause hypoglycemia through inappropriate secretion of insulin. Characterization of the in vitro dynamics of insulin secretion by perifused fragments of 10 human insulinomas permitted their subdivision into three functional groups with similar insulin content. Group A (four patients with fasting and/or postprandial hypoglycemic episodes) showed qualitatively normal responses to glucose, leucine, diazoxide, tolbutamide, and extracellular CaCl2 omission or excess. The effect of glucose was concentration dependent, but, compared with normal islets, insulin secretion was excessive in both low- and high-glucose conditions. Group B (three patients with fasting hypoglycemic episodes) was mainly characterized by large insulin responses to 1 mmol/L glucose, resulting in very high basal secretion rates that were inhibited by diazoxide and restored by tolbutamide but were not further augmented by other agents except for high levels of CaCl2. Group C (three patients with fasting hypoglycemic episodes) displayed very low rates of insulin secretion and virtually no response to stimuli (including high CaCl2 concentration) and inhibitors (CaCl2 omission being paradoxically stimulatory). In group B, the presence of low-Km hexokinase-I in insulinoma β-cells (not in adjacent islets) was revealed by immunohistochemistry. Human insulinomas thus show distinct, though not completely heterogeneous, defects in insulin secretion that are attributed to the undue expression of hexokinase-I in 3 of 10 patients.

Introduction

Insulinomas are uncommon, usually benign, tumors of pancreatic β-cells, which cause hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia (1–4). Early morphological studies (5,6) have led to distinct classifications of insulinomas on the basis of their histological and structural organization. They also suggested correlations between the ultrastructural appearance of the tumors and either their insulin content (5) or the efficacy of diazoxide in inhibiting excessive insulin secretion in the patient (6). However, a study based on a large series of 76 case patients reported that the two main morphological groups of insulinomas, trabecular and solid (or medullary), are not homogeneous but display highly variable insulin immunostaining patterns (7). These findings have been confirmed (8), leading to the conclusion that the histological structure of insulinomas is not a satisfactory marker of distinct functional properties.

The characteristics of insulin secretion by human insulinoma cells are poorly known. Several in vitro studies have addressed the question, but no clear picture of the differences with normal β-cells has emerged, for a number of reasons. First, the techniques used were disparate. Minced pieces of the tumor were incubated either immediately (9,10) or after culture for several days or weeks (11–13). In other studies, pieces of the tumor were digested with collagenase before the measurement of insulin secretion either immediately (14,15) or after 1–8 weeks of culture (16–20). Second, only a few, dissimilar protocols of stimulation or inhibition were usually tested in static incubations. Third, with a few exceptions (12,13), these functional studies were limited to single case patients.

Over a period of 10 years, we obtained a fragment from 10 insulinomas, of which we then characterized the dynamics of insulin secretion in vitro, using the same methods as used in our recent studies (21,22) of the pancreas of infants suffering from congenital hyperinsulinism. The results show heterogeneity in the responses but sufficient similarities to permit a tentative subdivision into three functional groups. In one of these, abnormal insulin secretion is attributed to the undue expression of hexokinase-I (HK-I) in tumoral β-cells.

Research Design and Methods

Subjects

Between 2001 and 2010, we obtained a fragment of fresh insulinoma tissue from nine patients who had been operated on at the University Clinics Saint-Luc in Brussels, Belgium, and one patient who had been operated on at the Hôtel-Dieu in Paris, France. The clinical diagnosis of insulinoma had been established on the basis of classic medical, biological, and imaging criteria (3,4,23,24), which led to surgical ablation of a tumor, resulting in the cessation of hypoglycemic episodes in all patients. The study was conducted with the requested approvals and according to the regulations of the Commission d’Ethique Biomédicale of the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Louvain (Brussels, Belgium).

In Vitro Studies of Insulin Secretion

The fragment of insulinoma used for in vitro studies of insulin secretion was macroscopically sampled from the tumor, avoiding contamination with normal pancreatic tissue when present. Upon arrival in the laboratory, the tissue was minced and collagenase digested like pancreatic fragments from infants undergoing surgery for congenital hyperinsulinism (21). After ∼20 h of culture in RPMI medium containing 5 mmol/L glucose, portions of digested tissue were distributed into perifusion chambers for the measurement of insulin secretion (21) and, at the end of the experiments, of insulin content (25). Because the amount of tissue placed in each chamber was variable, the insulin secretion rate was expressed relative to the insulin content of the tissue (fractional insulin secretion as a percentage of insulin content per minute). Details on the system, techniques, and solutions (containing 1 μmol/L forskolin during perifusions) can be found elsewhere (26). The number of tests performed with each preparation was determined by the amount of available tissue. Two protocols evaluating acute and concentration-dependent insulin responses to glucose and testing the effects of diazoxide and tolbutamide could be performed in all insulinomas. Insulin secretion in response to high extracellular CaCl2 concentration was tested in 9 of 10 insulinomas. Two other protocols were performed in a number of insulinomas, which are indicated in the text and legends. The initial insulin content of the tumor was not directly measured but was estimated by adding the amount of insulin secreted during culture and experiments to the insulin content measured at the end of perifusions (21). In two case patients, attempts to measure insulin secretion from pancreatic tissue outside the tumor were unsuccessful because insulin was not measurable in the perifusion medium of the small available fragments.

Morphological Studies

Fragments of insulinomas, sometimes with small adjacent regions of normal tissue, were fixed in formalin and/or Bouin solution for conventional microscopy and immunohistochemical identification of insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin (27) or of the proliferation marker Ki-67 (28). The volume density of β-cells in insulinomas was determined by point counting on slices immunostained for insulin (27). Staining with Congo Red was used to identify amyloid deposits. Immunodetection of HK-I was performed as previously described (22).

Results

Subdivision of the studied insulinomas in three functional groups was performed retrospectively based on of the pattern of insulin secretion observed in vitro and on the presence or absence of HK-I in insulinoma β-cells (see below). The major characteristics of the 10 case patients, all of whom were negative for mutations in the MEN-1 gene, are given in Table 1. The first symptoms suggestive of hypoglycemia occurred 8–50 months before surgery. Hypoglycemic episodes occurring after meals were clearly documented in three patients from group A.

View this table:
  • View inline
  • View popup
Table 1

Characteristics of patients and insulinomas

Morphological Aspect of Insulinomas

The diagnosis of insulinoma was histologically confirmed in all case patients. The insulinomas were classified as “solid” or “trabecular” according to established criteria (6,7) (Table 1). The typical appearances of the two forms can be seen in Fig. 1. As reported previously (6–8), insulin immunostaining was often polarized in β-cells of trabecular insulinomas (Fig. 1, case patient 8) and was more diffuse and heterogeneous in β-cells of solid insulinomas (Fig. 1, case patient 2). Notably, both histological types were observed in the three functional groups (Table 1). All were well differentiated, with a low proliferation index (2–10%) (Supplementary Fig. 1). The size of the tumor ranged between 0.4 and 1.9 mL in nine case patients and was very large (16 mL) in case patient 4. The volume density of β-cells in the tumors averaged 44%, but was highly variable (13–73%) owing to the sometimes high proportions of mesenchymal tissue, but not of non–β-endocrine cells (Table 1). After staining with Congo Red, amyloid deposits were detected in five of nine insulinomas, a similar proportion as in a larger study (29) (Supplementary Fig. 1). Amyloid deposits were abundant in only two insulinomas from group A and were rare or absent in insulinomas from groups B and C (Table 1).

Figure 1
  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
  • Download powerpoint
Figure 1

Insulin immunostaining in four of the studied insulinomas. Case patients 2 and 7 show a solid organization of β-cells, whereas case patients 4 and 8 show the characteristic pattern of trabecular insulinomas. In case patient 4, the abundant yellowish material, visible without staining by Congo Red, corresponds to amyloid deposits. Scale bar = 50 μm.

Insulin Concentration in Insulinomas

The tumor insulin concentration was highly variable, ranging from 40 to 395 ng/mg (mean 132 ng/mg). This variability persisted after normalization for differences in β-cell proportions (Table 1). None of the three groups was characterized by consistently high or low insulin concentrations (Table 1).

Effects of Glucose, Diazoxide, and Tolbutamide on Insulin Secretion

In insulinomas from group A, the “basal” insulin secretion rate, measured in 1 mmol/L glucose, ranged from 0.02% to 0.12%/min. Increasing the glucose concentration to 15 mmol/L stimulated insulin secretion several-fold in the four case patients (Fig. 2A). This stimulation was partially (case patient 1) or completely inhibited by treatment with 100 μmol/L diazoxide and reversibly restored by 100 μmol/L tolbutamide. These responses are thus qualitatively similar to those observed in isolated islets from normal subjects (26) and fragments of normal pancreas from infants (21). The major difference is a sometimes more sluggish onset and a less pronounced biphasic pattern of the response to glucose.

Figure 2
  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
  • Download powerpoint
Figure 2

Effects of glucose and drugs acting on KATP channels on insulin secretion by insulinoma fragments from the 10 studied case patients. All experiments, performed with a medium containing 1 μmol/L forskolin to increase cAMP levels in β-cells, were started by a 60-min stabilization period, of which only the last 10 min are shown. At time 0, the concentration of glucose was increased from 1 mmol/L (G1) to 15 mmol/L (G15), before the addition of 100 μmol/L diazoxide (Dz 100) and 100 μmol/L tolbutamide (Tolb 100), as indicated at the top of the panels. The subdivision of the studied case patients into three groups (A, B, and C) was based on the similarity of the insulin responses to different stimuli and will thus be consistent throughout. Note the differences in scale between panels, particularly between panel C and panels A and B.

In group B, insulinomas 5 and 6 were characterized by a very high insulin secretion rate in 1 mmol/L glucose (0.40% and 0.19%/min), and, except for a short-lived initial increase, no further stimulation by 15 mmol/L glucose (Fig. 2B). In case patient 7, a slower but more sustained response to 15 mmol/L glucose occurred above a less markedly elevated basal rate in 1 mmol/L glucose (0.09%/min) (Fig. 2B, bottom panel). The three insulinomas were sensitive to diazoxide, which inhibited insulin secretion well below the values measured in 1 mmol/L glucose, and to tolbutamide, which reversibly reversed this inhibition (Fig. 2B).

In insulinomas from group C, the basal rate of insulin secretion in 1 mmol/L glucose was low, ranging from 0.01% to 0.02%/min. Stimulation with 15 mmol/L glucose only transiently and minimally increased insulin secretion (case patient 8) or was ineffective (case patient 9); addition of diazoxide and tolbutamide also was without effect (Fig. 2C, top panel). It was only in case patient 10 that qualitatively normal but quantitatively small responses to glucose, diazoxide, and tolbutamide were observed (Fig. 2C, bottom panel).

Effects of Stepwise Increases in Glucose Concentration on Insulin Secretion

In group A, stepwise stimulation with glucose augmented insulin secretion in a concentration-dependent manner (Fig. 3A). In case patients 1, 2, and 3, 1 mmol/L glucose approximately doubled (1.5-, 2.2-, and 2.4-fold) the insulin secretion rate, which then kept increasing up to 5 or 10 mmol/L glucose. In case patient 4, in which the experiment was started in 1 mmol/L glucose, stimulation of secretion occurred only at 5 mmol/L glucose and above (Fig. 3A, bottom panel).

Figure 3
  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
  • Download powerpoint
Figure 3

Effects of stepwise increases and decreases in glucose concentration (G [in mmol/L]) on insulin secretion by insulinoma fragments from the 10 studied case patients. There was no period in glucose-free medium (G0) at the start and the end of the experiment with tissue from case patient 4 (group A). For the sake of clarity, secretion rates were multiplied by 2 in case patient 7 (group B); the actual values are thus twice as small. Note the differences in scale between panels, particularly between panel C and panels A and B.

In group B, the concentration dependency of the response to glucose was markedly altered (Fig. 3B). In case patients 5 and 6, the insulin secretion rate displayed a rapid and large peak in response to 1 mmol/L glucose (40-fold and 6-fold increases) and then regularly declined in the face of stepwise increases in glucose concentration. The response of case patient 7 was slightly different (Fig. 3B, bottom panel). Insulin secretion was also induced by 1 mmol/L glucose (4.5-fold increase), but the response was of slower onset and remained sustained when the glucose concentration was increased further. In no case patient was the switch from 10 to 1 mmol/L glucose followed by an obvious decrease in insulin secretion, whereas the return to a glucose-free medium was inhibitory in case patients 5 and 7.

In group C, no stimulation of insulin secretion occurred in response to stepwise increases in glucose (Fig. 3C). In case patients 8 and 9, a paradoxical increase in secretion was seen when the glucose concentration was lowered from 10 to 1 mmol/L (Fig. 3C, top panel).

Effects of Various Stimulatory and Inhibitory Conditions on Insulin Secretion

In the four insulinomas from group A, the addition of leucine and glutamine (5 mmol/L each) to a medium containing 3 mmol/L glucose induced biphasic insulin secretion. This is illustrated for case patients 1 and 2 in Fig. 4A. The omission of extracellular CaCl2 reversibly abolished secretion, which was also strongly inhibited by the activation of α2-adrenoceptors with clonidine. In group B, only insulinoma 5 was tested. The two amino acids were apparently ineffective, but the high rate of insulin secretion induced by 3 mmol/L glucose was completely and reversibly abolished by the omission of CaCl2 and was partially inhibited by clonidine (Fig. 4B). In group C, the combination of leucine and glutamine was ineffective, and the omission of CaCl2 was followed by a paradoxical, reversible increase in secretion (Fig. 4C).

Figure 4
  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
  • Download powerpoint
Figure 4

Effects of various stimulatory and inhibitory conditions on insulin secretion by insulinoma fragments from several of the studied case patients. A–C: The concentration of glucose was 3 mmol/L (G3) throughout. Leucine (Leu) and glutamine (Gln) (5 mmol/L each) were added at time 0 and remained present until the end. Extracellular CaCl2 (normal concentration of 2.5 mmol/L) was then omitted (Ca 0 [with the addition of 100 μmol/L EGTA]), and 1 μmol/L clonidine was added as indicated. The protocol was tested in four of four, one of three, and two of three case patients from groups A, B, and C, respectively. D–F: In a medium containing 1 mmol/L glucose (G1), 500 μmol/L tolbutamide (Tolb 500) was added at 0 min and remained present until the end. The concentration of glucose was then transiently increased to 15 mmol/L (G15) as indicated. The protocol was tested in two of four, two of three, and two of three case patients from groups A, B, and C, respectively. For the sake of clarity, secretion rates were multiplied by 2 in case patient 4 (group A); the actual values are thus twice as small. Note the differences in scale between panels, particularly between panels C and F and panels A, B, D, and E.

In normal β-cells, glucose controls insulin secretion through changes in the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration (triggering pathway) and amplification of Ca2+ effects on the exocytosis of insulin granules (metabolic amplifying pathway) (30). Metabolic amplification can be studied when all β-cell KATP channels are closed by a high concentration of sulfonylurea. In insulinomas 3 and 4 from group A, 500 μmol/L tolbutamide triggered a large peak of insulin secretion followed by stabilization of the secretion rate above prestimulatory values. Subsequent augmentation of the glucose concentration to 15 mmol/L, in the continuous presence of tolbutamide, increased insulin secretion in a reversible manner (Fig. 4D). In group B, tolbutamide was hardly effective (case patient 6) or transiently (case patient 7) effective in 1 mmol/L glucose, and the subsequent addition of 15 mmol/L glucose had no obvious effect (Fig. 4E). In group C, the high tolbutamide concentration was ineffective in 1 mmol/L glucose, and a subsequent increase in the glucose concentration to 15 mmol/L was slightly but reversibly inhibitory (Fig. 4F).

Effects of High Extracellular CaCl2 Concentration

A sudden increase in the concentration of extracellular CaCl2 from 1.25 to 10 mmol/L in a medium containing 5 mmol/L glucose evoked a large reversible peak of insulin secretion in all tested insulinomas from groups A and B (Fig. 5A and B). In group A, the relative stimulation ranged from 9.7-fold to 14.7-fold. It was smaller in group B, ranging from 4.9-fold to 7.6-fold. In contrast, insulinomas from group C did not increase insulin secretion in response to high extracellular CaCl2 concentrations (Fig. 5C).

Figure 5
  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
  • Download powerpoint
Figure 5

Effects of a high extracellular CaCl2 concentration on insulin secretion by insulinoma fragments from most of the studied case patients. In a medium containing 5 mmol/L glucose throughout, the concentration of extracellular CaCl2 was increased from 1.25 mmol/L (Ca 1.25) to 10 mmol/L (Ca 10) for a period of 10 min, as indicated. The protocol was tested in three of four, three of three, and three of three case patients from groups A, B, and C, respectively. Note the differences in scale between panels, particularly between panel C and panels A and B.

Expression of HK-I in Some Insulinoma Cells

The stimulation of insulin secretion by as little as 1 mmol/L glucose in certain insulinomas led us to search for the presence of a low-Km hexokinase in insulinoma cells. Immunohistochemistry for HK-I was negative in the three insulinomas from group A that could be tested (Table 1). As illustrated for case patient 2, β-cells within the tumor (and islets outside the tumor) were not labeled (Fig. 6A), in contrast to neural, centro-acinar, and vascular cells (Fig. 6A, inset). In the three case patients in group B, insulinoma cells were positive for HK-I (Fig. 6B), whereas β-cells in islets outside the tumor were negative (Fig. 6B, inset). In case patients 5 and 6, all insulinoma cells were labeled, though with a variable intensity, whereas areas of negative and positive cells coexisted in case patient 7. The three case patients in group C displayed a punctated positivity for HK-I in many insulinoma cells intermingled with negative cells (Fig. 6C), whereas β-cells of the islets were negative (Fig. 6C, inset).

Figure 6
  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
  • Download powerpoint
Figure 6

Immunohistochemical detection of HK-I in certain insulinomas. In group A, β-cells of the insulinoma were negative in contrast to vessel cells, which are shown by arrows (main panel). Outside the tumor (inset), ganglionic neural cells were strongly positive, and vessel cells (black arrow) and centro-acinar cells (red arrow) were positive. In group B, β-cells were positive within the tumor (main panel). Outside the tumor (inset), HK-I labeling was clear in vascular and centro-acinar cells, fainter in acinar cells, and negative in β-cells of the islets (arrow). In group C, many, though not all, β-cells of insulinomas showed punctated labeling of HK-I (main panel). Outside the tumor (inset), β-cells of the islets (arrow) were negative, whereas centro-acinar cells were positive. Scale bars = 50 μm. Enlarged versions of the insets are shown in Supplementary Fig. 2.

Discussion

Although our series of 10 insulinomas is the largest that has been functionally studied in vitro, its limited size, inherent to the rarity of the pathology, remains a handicap in our attempt to classify these endocrine tumors according to functional features. Our subdivision into three groups has limitations and would have been strengthened by genetic analysis of the tumors. It may well be an oversimplification of the heterogeneous behavior of these tumoral β-cells, but enough similarities appear to justify their grouping rather than a multiplication of smaller categories.

No consistent differences in symptom duration, tumor size, histological type, or insulin concentration were found among the three functional groups of insulinomas. For the 10 case patients, the average tumor insulin concentration (132 ng/mg) was similar to that measured in a normal autopsy pancreas (125 ng/mg) (31), but the interindividual variability was larger (10-fold vs. 4-fold). Higher average insulin concentrations and even greater variability (100- to 200-fold) were found in larger series (5,32). Insulinomas contain variable, sometimes high, proportions of mesenchymal tissue (vessels, amyloid deposits, and connective tissue) that decrease the apparent insulin concentration when expressed per weight. Nevertheless, because the β-cell fraction (13–73%) largely exceeded that in a normal pancreas (∼1.25%), it is clear that the concentration of insulin per β-cell is much lower in insulinomas than in normal islets, as has also been concluded by others (5,32). Finally, from tumor size and β-cell volume density, we can calculate that the mass of insulinoma β-cells ranged between 155 and 2,080 mg in our 10 case patients, compared with 300–1,500 mg (average ∼900 mg) β-cells in the pancreas of healthy subjects (31). It is therefore unlikely that this additional number of β-cells would cause profound hypoglycemia if these insulinoma cells were functionally normal.

In previous in vitro investigations of human insulinoma cells, insulin secretion was unaffected by high glucose concentrations in five case patients from three studies (11,12,16) and was variably augmented in seven single case patients (9,10,14,17–20). Other agents were rarely tested: insulin secretion was increased by a sulfonylurea in two insulinomas (18,19) and leucine was ineffective in one of one insulinoma (11). An inhibition of insulin secretion was observed upon CaCl2 omission in one insulinoma (11), whereas diazoxide addition was ineffective in two of two insulinomas (9,12). In our experience, basal insulin secretion by isolated human islets perifused with 1 mmol/L glucose was ∼0.01% of their insulin content per minute (26). Much higher (5–50×) basal rates of secretion were measured here in insulinomas from groups A (three of four case patients) and B (three of three case patients). Distinct procedures for tissue preparation may contribute to the difference but are not the sole explanation. Thus, compared with normal islets, the difference is only 1.5- to 2-fold in insulinomas from group C, and only 2- to 3-fold in collagenase-digested fragments of the normal pancreas of infants (21,22).

In group A, the four insulinomas shared several features that make them qualitatively similar to normal islets (26) or fragments of normal pancreata (21). These included sustained insulin secretion in response to 15 mmol/L glucose; normal inhibitory and stimulatory effects of diazoxide and tolbutamide, respectively; normal stimulation by amino acids; inhibition by the omission of CaCl2 or the addition of clonidine; and functioning of the metabolic amplifying pathway. All of these characteristics suggest qualitatively normal stimulus-secretion coupling with operative KATP channels. However, insulin secretion was quantitatively excessive. Thus, case patients 1, 2, and 3 displayed abnormally high secretion rates in low- and high-glucose conditions and a left shift of the glucose dependency of the response. Whereas the normal threshold is at 3 mmol/L glucose (21,26), a doubling of insulin secretion was already observed at 1 mmol/L glucose, which could explain the occurrence of fasting hypoglycemic episodes in the patients. This threshold lowering was not correlated with HK-I detection in insulinoma cells, as in group B (see below), perhaps because expression of the enzyme was weaker, also explaining the smaller response to 1 mmol/L glucose than in group B. The insulin secretion rate induced by high glucose concentrations (0.3–0.4%/min) was also more than twofold higher than in normal islets or fragments of normal pancreata tested under similar conditions (∼0.15%/min) (21,26). We have no mechanistic explanation for this excessive insulin response, which probably explains why hypoglycemic episodes also occurred after meals, as documented in case patients 2 and 3. Unlike the other three case patients of group A, case patient 4 did not show an increase in glucose sensitivity with elevation of the secretion rate at a low glucose level, but the response to high glucose concentrations was also exceedingly large, which might explain why hypoglycemic episodes occurred only after meals. Notably, this case patient was also exceptional due to the large size of the tumor that was filled with amyloid deposits.

In group B, the main characteristics of insulinomas 5 and 6 were a large increase in insulin secretion in response to 1 mmol/L glucose, followed by a progressive decline in the face of subsequent increases in glucose concentration. Strong stimulation already by 1 mmol/L glucose may explain why stepping to 15 mmol/L glucose was poorly efficient and why diazoxide inhibited insulin secretion well below the rates measured at 1 mmol/L glucose. The abnormal sensitivity of insulinomas to low glucose concentrations with poor further response to higher glucose concentrations can result in hypoglycemic episodes in the fasting state and not after meals. Two insulinomas resembling our case patients 5 and 6 have previously been studied in vitro (18,20). Compared with a glucose-free medium, 1 mmol/L glucose induced an ∼10-fold increase in insulin secretion, which was not larger at higher glucose concentrations. This excessive sensitivity to a low glucose concentration remained unexplained (18) or was tentatively ascribed to the strong expression of the high-affinity GLUT-1 in the tumor cells (20). However, it is now established that GLUT-1 and GLUT-3 are the major glucose transporters in normal human β-cells (33,34). Using immunohistochemistry, we detected the presence of the low-Km HK-I in tumor β-cells, whereas normal islet β-cells, which do not express HK-I but use the high-Km glucokinase to phosphorylate glucose (35,36), were negative as expected. We therefore suggest that, in the insulinoma cells of group B, glucose metabolism is already markedly accelerated when the glucose concentration is low. The expected consequences are a virtually complete closure of KATP channels and full activation of the metabolic amplifying pathway (30), which would account for the poor effect of tolbutamide, except when KATP channels have been opened by diazoxide, and for the virtual lack of further stimulation by the combination of leucine and glutamine, which mainly acts through the acceleration of metabolism (37,38). In support of our proposal that the activity of HK-I in insulinoma cells is responsible for abnormal insulin secretion at low glucose concentrations in the case patients in group B, we wish to underline the similarities with our previous findings in a group of infants with focal hyperinsulinism (22). The in vitro abnormalities of insulin secretion associated with the presence of HK-I in a subset of their β-cells are quasi-superimposable on those of insulinomas from group B. A dominant form of congenital hyperinsulinism has also tentatively been attributed to abnormal HK-I expression in β-cells (39). Case patient 7 behaved slightly differently from case patients 5 and 6. Insulin secretion was also induced by 1 mmol/L glucose, but higher concentrations retained some effect, as did tolbutamide even in the absence of diazoxide. A plausible explanation is the weaker and heterogeneous presence of HK-I in the tumor, with some β-cells presumably maintaining a normal control of glucose phosphorylation by glucokinase.

In group C, the major characteristics of the three insulinomas were very low rates of insulin secretion despite substantial insulin stores in the tumor and a virtually complete absence of responses to stimuli and inhibitors active in the other two groups. Poor stimulation by glucose and the ineffectiveness of diazoxide and tolbutamide are reminiscent of the defects observed in focal lesions of the pancreas causing congenital hyperinsulinism owing to a lack of functional KATP channels in β-cells (21). However, major differences distinguish the two pathological entities, as follows: insulin secretion rates were 5- to 10-fold lower in these insulinomas than in focal lesions; the decrease in secretion produced by high glucose levels in the presence of high tolbutamide levels in insulinomas was never seen in focal lesions; the omission of CaCl2 paradoxically increased insulin secretion in insulinomas, whereas it consistently suppressed it in focal lesions; clonidine was ineffective in insulinomas; and a high extracellular CaCl2 concentration was ineffective in insulinomas but strongly stimulated insulin secretion in focal lesions (21). Several morphological features also distinguish focal lesions of infants and insulinomas (27). The functional significance of HK-I detected in insulinomas from group C is unclear in view of the virtually complete ineffectiveness of glucose on secretion. Intriguingly, HK-I immunostaining was not present in all cells, suggesting heterogeneity within the tumor. A poor viability of these three insulinomas cannot be formally excluded but would be expected to cause insulin leakage rather than low baseline secretion and is not supported by their preserved morphology and similar pattern of HK-I staining. Distal defects in the exocytotic machinery are possible, but how they caused hypoglycemic episodes (in the fasting state only) is unclear.

Selective arterial calcium stimulation of the pancreas with hepatic venous sampling is used for preoperative localization of insulinomas (23,40–42). We observed strong stimulation of insulin secretion by 10 mmol/L CaCl2 in all insulinomas from groups A and B, and no response in group C. In vitro stimulation by high CaCl2 concentration has previously been reported in three other case patients and was attributed to the activation of an extracellular Ca2+-sensing receptor (13,43), but the augmentation of Ca2+ influx through the plasma membrane may also contribute. In fragments of the normal pancreas of infants, a high CaCl2 concentration caused an insulin response that was qualitatively similar to but quantitatively smaller (threefold increase) than that in insulinomas from groups A and B (21). The discrepancy with the lack of effect on normal pancreas in vivo (23,40–42) is probably due to higher concentrations of CaCl2 and glucose during in vitro experiments than during in vivo tests. Notwithstanding, our results show that false-negative results in vivo may be due to the unresponsiveness of some insulinomas (group C).

In conclusion, human insulinomas showed distinct, though not completely heterogeneous, defects in insulin secretion in vitro. We subdivided our 10 case patients in three groups on the following basis. Group A was characterized by a qualitatively normal stimulus-secretion coupling with effective control by glucose. However, increased sensitivity to the sugar caused the elevation of baseline secretion at low glucose levels, and the response to high glucose levels was quantitatively excessive, which may explain postprandial episodes of hypoglycemia. No HK-I was detected, but its presence at low levels cannot be excluded. Group B was characterized mainly by undue expression of HK-I in insulinoma β-cells, which resulted in the strong stimulation of insulin secretion by as little as 1 mmol/L glucose and the loss of regulation by higher glucose concentrations, two features that may explain why hypoglycemic episodes only occurred during fasting. Group C showed the heterogeneous presence of HK-I, very low rates of insulin secretion, and a virtually complete absence of responses to stimuli and inhibitors, features that do not readily explain fasting hypoglycemic episodes in these patients. Without investigation of the mechanisms of tumorigenesis and without genetic studies, we cannot determine whether these three groups have distinct origins. However, we can speculate that transitions might exist between groups, as illustrated by case patient 7, which expressed HK-I in some parts of the tumor only and was difficult to assign to functional group B rather than group A.

Article Information

Acknowledgments. The authors thank Sebastien Godecharles and Fabien Knockaert for technical assistance at the medical faculty of the University of Louvain (Brussels, Belgium). The authors also thank Professors Christian Boitard and Etienne Larger for giving access to the insulinoma of one of their patients from the Hôtel-Dieu, Paris, France. In addition, the authors thank Professor Dominique Maiter and Dr. Raluca Furnica from the University Clinics Saint-Luc (Brussels, Belgium) for their help in tracing clinical information on the patients.

Duality of Interest. No potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article were reported.

Author Contributions. J.-C.H. designed the research, researched and analyzed the data, and wrote the article. M.N., Y.G., J.R., and C.S. researched and analyzed the data and reviewed the article. J.-C.H. is the guarantor of this work and, as such, had full access to all the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

Footnotes

  • This article contains Supplementary Data online at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.2337/db15-0527/-/DC1.

  • J.R. is currently affiliated with the Laboratory of Hepato-Gastroenterology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.

  • C.S. is currently affiliated with the Institute of Pathology, Lausanne University Hospital, Lausanne, Switzerland.

  • Received April 18, 2015.
  • Accepted June 20, 2015.
  • © 2015 by the American Diabetes Association. Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered.

References

  1. ↵
    1. Volk BX,
    2. Arquilla ER
    1. Creutzfeldt W
    . Endocrine tumors of the pancreas. In The Diabetic Pancreas. Volk BX, Arquilla ER, Eds. New York, Plenum, 1985, p. 543–586
    1. Klöppel G,
    2. Heitz PU
    . Pancreatic endocrine tumors. Pathol Res Pract 1988;183:155–168pmid:2898775
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  2. ↵
    1. Placzkowski KA,
    2. Vella A,
    3. Thompson GB, et al
    . Secular trends in the presentation and management of functioning insulinoma at the Mayo Clinic, 1987-2007. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2009;94:1069–1073pmid:19141587
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  3. ↵
    1. Guettier JM,
    2. Gorden P
    . Insulin secretion and insulin-producing tumors. Expert Rev Endocrinol Metab 2010;5:217–227pmid:20401170
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  4. ↵
    1. Creutzfeldt W,
    2. Arnold R,
    3. Creutzfeldt C,
    4. Deuticke U,
    5. Frerichs H,
    6. Track NS
    . Biochemical and morphological investigations of 30 human insulinomas. Correlation between the tumour content of insulin and proinsulin-like components and the histological and ultrastructural appearance. Diabetologia 1973;9:217–231pmid:4351967
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  5. ↵
    1. Berger M,
    2. Bordi C,
    3. Cüppers HJ, et al
    . Functional and morphologic characterization of human insulinomas. Diabetes 1983;32:921–931pmid:6311653
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  6. ↵
    1. Roth J,
    2. Klöppel G,
    3. Madsen OD,
    4. Storch MJ,
    5. Heitz PU
    . Distribution patterns of proinsulin and insulin in human insulinomas: an immunohistochemical analysis in 76 tumors. Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol 1992;63:51–61pmid:1362022
    OpenUrlPubMed
  7. ↵
    1. Azzoni C,
    2. D’Adda T,
    3. Tamburrano G, et al
    . Functioning human insulinomas. An immunohistochemical analysis of intracellular insulin processing. Virchows Arch 1998;433:495–504pmid:9870681
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  8. ↵
    1. Gutman RA,
    2. Fink G,
    3. Shapiro JR,
    4. Selawry H,
    5. Recant L
    . Proinsulin and insulin release with a human insulinoma and adjacent nonadenomatous pancreas. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1973;36:978–987pmid:4349051
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  9. ↵
    1. Bone AJ,
    2. Gumpert RW,
    3. Howell SL, et al
    . Regulation of insulin and glucagon secretion from a human islet cell adenoma. J Endocrinol 1977;74:273–280pmid:197189
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  10. ↵
    1. Adcock K,
    2. Austin M,
    3. Duckworth WC,
    4. Solomon SS,
    5. Murrell LR
    . Human islet cell adenoma: metabolic analysis of the patient and of tumor cells in monolayer culture. Diabetologia 1975;11:527–534pmid:173612
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  11. ↵
    1. Flatt PR,
    2. Swanston-Flatt SK,
    3. Powell CJ,
    4. Marks V
    . Defective regulation of insulin release and transmembrane Ca2+ fluxes by human islet cell tumours. Br J Cancer 1987;56:459–464pmid:2825749
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  12. ↵
    1. Kato M,
    2. Doi R,
    3. Imamura M, et al
    . Response of human insulinoma cells to extracellular calcium is different from normal B cells. Dig Dis Sci 1998;43:2429–2438pmid:9824130
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  13. ↵
    1. Chiba T,
    2. Yamatani T,
    3. Kadowaki S, et al
    . Glucose stimulates insulin release without altering cyclic AMP production or inositolphospholipid turnover in freshly obtained human insulinoma cells. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1987;145:263–268pmid:2439077
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  14. ↵
    1. Miura A,
    2. Ishizuka T,
    3. Itaya S, et al
    . Glucose- and phorbol ester-induced insulin secretion in human insulinoma cells--association with protein kinase C activation. Biochem Mol Biol Int 1998;46:739–745pmid:9844735
    OpenUrlPubMedWeb of Science
  15. ↵
    1. Chick WL,
    2. Lauris V,
    3. Soeldner JS,
    4. Tan MH,
    5. Grinbergs M
    . Monolayer culture of a human pancreatic beta-cell adenoma. Metabolism 1973;22:1217–1224pmid:4353648
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  16. ↵
    1. Saxe AW,
    2. Yoon JW,
    3. Gorden P,
    4. Brennan MF
    . Cell culture and in vitro studies of fresh and cryopreserved human insulinoma. In Vitro 1982;18:884–890pmid:6293963
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  17. ↵
    1. Yasunami Y,
    2. Funakoshi A,
    3. Ono J,
    4. Miyazaki K,
    5. Jimi A,
    6. Konomi K
    . In vitro study of cultured human insulinoma cells: evidence of abnormal sensitivity to glucose. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1987;65:110–115pmid:3034949
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  18. ↵
    1. Thivolet CH,
    2. Demidem A,
    3. Haftek M,
    4. Durand A,
    5. Bertrand J
    . Structure, function, and immunogenicity of human insulinoma cells. Diabetes 1988;37:1279–1286pmid:2457530
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  19. ↵
    1. Waeber G,
    2. Gomez F,
    3. Bishof-Delaloye A, et al
    . Insulinoma associated with a case of multiple endocrine neoplasia type I: functional somatostatin receptors and abnormal glucose-induced insulin secretion. Horm Res 1997;48:76–82pmid:9251924
    OpenUrlPubMed
  20. ↵
    1. Henquin JC,
    2. Nenquin M,
    3. Sempoux C, et al
    . In vitro insulin secretion by pancreatic tissue from infants with diazoxide-resistant congenital hyperinsulinism deviates from model predictions. J Clin Invest 2011;121:3932–3942pmid:21968111
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  21. ↵
    1. Henquin JC,
    2. Sempoux C,
    3. Marchandise J, et al
    . Congenital hyperinsulinism caused by hexokinase I expression or glucokinase-activating mutation in a subset of β-cells. Diabetes 2013;62:1689–1696pmid:23274908
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  22. ↵
    1. Cryer PE,
    2. Axelrod L,
    3. Grossman AB, et al, .; Endocrine Society
    . Evaluation and management of adult hypoglycemic disorders: an Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2009;94:709–728pmid:19088155
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  23. ↵
    1. Shin JJ,
    2. Gorden P,
    3. Libutti SK
    . Insulinoma: pathophysiology, localization and management. Future Oncol 2010;6:229–237pmid:20146582
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  24. ↵
    1. Detimary P,
    2. Jonas JC,
    3. Henquin JC
    . Stable and diffusible pools of nucleotides in pancreatic islet cells. Endocrinology 1996;137:4671–4676pmid:8895332
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  25. ↵
    1. Henquin JC,
    2. Dufrane D,
    3. Nenquin M
    . Nutrient control of insulin secretion in isolated normal human islets. Diabetes 2006;55:3470–3477pmid:17130494
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  26. ↵
    1. Sempoux C,
    2. Guiot Y,
    3. Dahan K, et al
    . The focal form of persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy: morphological and molecular studies show structural and functional differences with insulinoma. Diabetes 2003;52:784–794pmid:12606521
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  27. ↵
    1. Sempoux C,
    2. Guiot Y,
    3. Dubois D, et al
    . Pancreatic B-cell proliferation in persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy: an immunohistochemical study of 18 cases. Mod Pathol 1998;11:444–449pmid:9619597
    OpenUrlPubMedWeb of Science
  28. ↵
    1. O’Brien TD,
    2. Butler AE,
    3. Roche PC,
    4. Johnson KH,
    5. Butler PC
    . Islet amyloid polypeptide in human insulinomas. Evidence for intracellular amyloidogenesis. Diabetes 1994;43:329–336pmid:8288058
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  29. ↵
    1. Henquin JC
    . The dual control of insulin secretion by glucose involves triggering and amplifying pathways in β-cells. Diabetes Res Clin Pract 2011;93(Suppl. 1):S27–S31pmid:21864748
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  30. ↵
    1. Rahier J,
    2. Guiot Y,
    3. Goebbels RM,
    4. Sempoux C,
    5. Henquin JC
    . Pancreatic β-cell mass in European subjects with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Obes Metab 2008;10(Suppl. 4):32–42pmid:18834431
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  31. ↵
    1. Hayashi M,
    2. Floyd JC Jr.,
    3. Pek S,
    4. Fajans SS
    . Insulin, proinsulin, glucagon and gastrin in pancreatic tumors and in plasma of patients with organic hyperinsulinism. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1977;44:681–694pmid:14970
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  32. ↵
    1. De Vos A,
    2. Heimberg H,
    3. Quartier E, et al
    . Human and rat β cells differ in glucose transporter but not in glucokinase gene expression. J Clin Invest 1995;96:2489–2495pmid:7593639
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  33. ↵
    1. McCulloch LJ,
    2. van de Bunt M,
    3. Braun M,
    4. Frayn KN,
    5. Clark A,
    6. Gloyn AL
    . GLUT2 (SLC2A2) is not the principal glucose transporter in human pancreatic beta cells: implications for understanding genetic association signals at this locus. Mol Genet Metab 2011;104:648–653pmid:21920790
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  34. ↵
    1. Bedoya FJ,
    2. Wilson JM,
    3. Ghosh AK,
    4. Finegold D,
    5. Matschinsky FM
    . The glucokinase glucose sensor in human pancreatic islet tissue. Diabetes 1986;35:61–67pmid:3510141
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  35. ↵
    1. Schuit F,
    2. Moens K,
    3. Heimberg H,
    4. Pipeleers D
    . Cellular origin of hexokinase in pancreatic islets. J Biol Chem 1999;274:32803–32809pmid:10551841
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  36. ↵
    1. Li C,
    2. Buettger C,
    3. Kwagh J, et al
    . A signaling role of glutamine in insulin secretion. J Biol Chem 2004;279:13393–13401pmid:14736887
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  37. ↵
    1. MacDonald MJ,
    2. Fahien LA,
    3. Brown LJ,
    4. Hasan NM,
    5. Buss JD,
    6. Kendrick MA
    . Perspective: emerging evidence for signaling roles of mitochondrial anaplerotic products in insulin secretion. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 2005;288:E1–E15pmid:15585595
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  38. ↵
    1. Pinney SE,
    2. Ganapathy K,
    3. Bradfield J, et al
    . Dominant form of congenital hyperinsulinism maps to HK1 region on 10q. Horm Res Paediatr 2013;80:18–27pmid:23859901
    OpenUrlPubMed
  39. ↵
    1. Doppman JL,
    2. Miller DL,
    3. Chang R,
    4. Shawker TH,
    5. Gorden P,
    6. Norton JA
    . Insulinomas: localization with selective intraarterial injection of calcium. Radiology 1991;178:237–241pmid:1984311
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
    1. Guettier JM,
    2. Kam A,
    3. Chang R, et al
    . Localization of insulinomas to regions of the pancreas by intraarterial calcium stimulation: the NIH experience. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2009;94:1074–1080pmid:19190102
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  40. ↵
    1. Morganstein DL,
    2. Lewis DH,
    3. Jackson J, et al
    . The role of arterial stimulation and simultaneous venous sampling in addition to cross-sectional imaging for localisation of biochemically proven insulinoma. Eur Radiol 2009;19:2467–2473pmid:19597822
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
  41. ↵
    1. Komoto I,
    2. Kato M,
    3. Itami A, et al
    . Expression and function of the calcium-sensing receptor in pancreatic islets and insulinoma cells. Pancreas 2003;26:178–184pmid:12604917
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMedWeb of Science
View Abstract
PreviousNext
Back to top
Diabetes: 64 (10)

In this Issue

October 2015, 64(10)
  • Table of Contents
  • Table of Contents (PDF)
  • About the Cover
  • Index by Author
  • Masthead (PDF)
Sign up to receive current issue alerts
View Selected Citations (0)
Print
Download PDF
Article Alerts
Sign In to Email Alerts with your Email Address
Email Article

Thank you for your interest in spreading the word about Diabetes.

NOTE: We only request your email address so that the person you are recommending the page to knows that you wanted them to see it, and that it is not junk mail. We do not capture any email address.

Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
Human Insulinomas Show Distinct Patterns of Insulin Secretion In Vitro
(Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from Diabetes
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this page from the Diabetes web site.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Citation Tools
Human Insulinomas Show Distinct Patterns of Insulin Secretion In Vitro
Jean-Claude Henquin, Myriam Nenquin, Yves Guiot, Jacques Rahier, Christine Sempoux
Diabetes Oct 2015, 64 (10) 3543-3553; DOI: 10.2337/db15-0527

Citation Manager Formats

  • BibTeX
  • Bookends
  • EasyBib
  • EndNote (tagged)
  • EndNote 8 (xml)
  • Medlars
  • Mendeley
  • Papers
  • RefWorks Tagged
  • Ref Manager
  • RIS
  • Zotero
Add to Selected Citations
Share

Human Insulinomas Show Distinct Patterns of Insulin Secretion In Vitro
Jean-Claude Henquin, Myriam Nenquin, Yves Guiot, Jacques Rahier, Christine Sempoux
Diabetes Oct 2015, 64 (10) 3543-3553; DOI: 10.2337/db15-0527
del.icio.us logo Digg logo Reddit logo Twitter logo CiteULike logo Facebook logo Google logo Mendeley logo
  • Tweet Widget
  • Facebook Like
  • Google Plus One

Jump to section

  • Article
    • Abstract
    • Introduction
    • Research Design and Methods
    • Results
    • Discussion
    • Article Information
    • Footnotes
    • References
  • Figures & Tables
  • Suppl Material
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF

Related Articles

Cited By...

More in this TOC Section

  • ETV5 Regulates Hepatic Fatty Acid Metabolism Through PPAR Signaling Pathway
  • The Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonist Eplerenone Suppresses Interstitial Fibrosis in Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes
  • Depletion of Adipocyte Becn1 Leads to Lipodystrophy and Metabolic Dysregulation
Show more Pathophysiology

Similar Articles

Navigate

  • Current Issue
  • Online Ahead of Print
  • Scientific Sessions Abstracts
  • Collections
  • Archives
  • Submit
  • Subscribe
  • Email Alerts
  • RSS Feeds

More Information

  • About the Journal
  • Instructions for Authors
  • Journal Policies
  • Reprints and Permissions
  • Advertising
  • Privacy Policy: ADA Journals
  • Copyright Notice/Public Access Policy
  • Contact Us

Other ADA Resources

  • Diabetes Care
  • Clinical Diabetes
  • Diabetes Spectrum
  • Scientific Sessions Abstracts
  • Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes
  • BMJ Open - Diabetes Research & Care
  • Professional Books
  • Diabetes Forecast

 

  • DiabetesJournals.org
  • Diabetes Core Update
  • ADA's DiabetesPro
  • ADA Member Directory
  • Diabetes.org

© 2021 by the American Diabetes Association. Diabetes Print ISSN: 0012-1797, Online ISSN: 1939-327X.