Frederick Banting's actual great idea: The role of fetal bovine islets in the discovery of insulin.
James R WrightPublished in: Islets (2021)
Banting's fetal calf pancreas story is told using primary and secondary historical sources and then critically examined using both historical and recent data on species phylogeny, islet ontogeny, fetal/neonatal islet culture/transplantation, etc. Results/Discussion: Only ruminants develop dual islets populations sequentially; fetal calf pancreata, at the gestational ages Banting used, possess numerous insulin-rich giant peri-lobular islets, which credibly explain the potency of his fetal calf insulin extract. Use of non-ruminant fetal pancreata would have failed.