A primer on modelling pancreatic islets: from models of coupled β-cells to multicellular islet models.
Gerardo J Félix-MartínezJ Rafael Godínez-FernándezPublished in: Islets (2023)
Pancreatic islets are mini-organs composed of hundreds or thousands of ɑ, β and δ-cells, which, respectively, secrete glucagon, insulin and somatostatin, key hormones for the regulation of blood glucose. In pancreatic islets, hormone secretion is tightly regulated by both internal and external mechanisms, including electrical communication and paracrine signaling between islet cells. Given its complexity, the experimental study of pancreatic islets has been complemented with computational modeling as a tool to gain a better understanding about how all the mechanisms involved at different levels of organization interact. In this review, we describe how multicellular models of pancreatic cells have evolved from the early models of electrically coupled β-cells to models in which experimentally derived architectures and both electrical and paracrine signals have been considered.