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Diabetes as a Pancreatic Microvascular Disease-A Pericytic Perspective.

Luciana Mateus GonçalvesCatarina de Andrade BarbozaJoana Almaça
Published in: The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society (2024)
Diabetes is not only an endocrine but also a vascular disease. Vascular defects are usually seen as consequence of diabetes. However, at the level of the pancreatic islet, vascular alterations have been described before symptom onset. Importantly, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying these early vascular defects have not been identified, neither how these could impact the function of islet endocrine cells. In this review, we will discuss the possibility that dysfunction of the mural cells of the microvasculature-known as pericytes-underlies vascular defects observed in islets in pre-symptomatic stages. Pericytes are crucial for vascular homeostasis throughout the body, but their physiological and pathophysiological functions in islets have only recently started to be explored. A previous study had already raised interest in the "microvascular" approach to this disease. With our increased understanding of the crucial role of the islet microvasculature for glucose homeostasis, here we will revisit the vascular aspects of islet function and how their deregulation could contribute to diabetes pathogenesis, focusing in particular on type 1 diabetes (T1D).
Keyphrases
  • type diabetes
  • cardiovascular disease
  • glycemic control
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • insulin resistance
  • blood pressure
  • blood glucose
  • metabolic syndrome
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress