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  2. Alpha cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_cell

    Michael Lane was the one to discover that alpha cells were histologically different than beta cells in 1907. [3] Before the function of alpha cells was discovered, the function of their metabolic product, glucagon, was discovered. The discovery of the function of glucagon coincides with the discovery of the function of insulin. In 1921, Banting ...

  3. Glucokinase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glucokinase

    Alpha cells produce less glucagon in response to rising glucose levels, and more glucagon if blood glucose is low. Glucagon serves as a signal to the liver to break down glycogen and release glucose into the blood. Glucokinase in beta cells serves as a glucose sensor, amplifying insulin secretion as blood glucose rises. In the pancreatic beta ...

  4. Beta cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_cell

    Beta cells (β-cells) are specialized endocrine cells located within the pancreatic islets of Langerhans responsible for the production and release of insulin and amylin. [1] Constituting ~50–70% of cells in human islets, beta cells play a vital role in maintaining blood glucose levels. [2] Problems with beta cells can lead to disorders such ...

  5. Pancreatic islets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancreatic_islets

    It has also been demonstrated that alpha cells can spontaneously switch fate and transdifferentiate into beta cells in both healthy and diabetic human and mouse pancreatic islets, a possible future source for beta cell regeneration. [29] In fact, it has been found that islet morphology and endocrine differentiation are directly related. [30]

  6. Hemoglobin A - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemoglobin_A

    Fetuses have a non-alpha chain called gamma and after birth it is then called beta. The beta chain will pair with the alpha chain. It is the combining of two alpha and non-alpha chains which create a hemoglobin molecule. Two alpha and two gamma chains form fetal hemoglobin or hemoglobin F (HbF). After the first five to six months after birth ...

  7. Pancreatic beta cell function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancreatic_beta_cell_function

    Pancreatic beta cell function (synonyms G β or, if calculated from fasting concentrations of insulin and glucose, HOMA-Beta or SPINA-GBeta) is one of the preconditions of euglycaemia, i.e. normal blood sugar regulation. It is defined as insulin secretory capacity, i.e. the maximum amount of insulin to be produced by beta cells in a given unit ...

  8. Globulin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globulin

    The alpha globulins and the beta globulin are mainly created in the liver and the gamma globulin are made by lymphocytes and plasma cells in lymphoid tissue. These globulins should consist of non-albumin proteins and there could be about a hundred different proteins that are included in the globulins.

  9. Pancreatic polypeptide cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancreatic_polypeptide_cells

    In PP cells, the size of the insulin granules are smaller and spherical and similar to those in alpha cells. This is noted in human PP cells, but different animals have been shown to have different sized granules compared to humans, like rodents. In cats and dogs, PP cells have large granules. [8] In rats, PP cells have few granules, similar to ...