β-Cell Pathophysiology: A Review of Advanced Optical Microscopy Applications.
Gianmarco FerriLuca PesceMarta TesiPiero MarchettiFrancesco CardarelliPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
β-cells convert glucose (input) resulting in the controlled release of insulin (output), which in turn has the role to maintain glucose homeostasis. β-cell function is regulated by a complex interplay between the metabolic processing of the input, its transformation into second-messenger signals, and final mobilization of insulin-containing granules towards secretion of the output. Failure at any level in this process marks β-cell dysfunction in diabetes, thus making β-cells obvious potential targets for therapeutic purposes. Addressing quantitatively β-cell (dys)function at the molecular level in living samples requires probing simultaneously the spatial and temporal dimensions at the proper resolution. To this aim, an increasing amount of research efforts are exploiting the potentiality of biophysical techniques. In particular, using excitation light in the visible/infrared range, a number of optical-microscopy-based approaches have been tailored to the study of β-cell-(dys)function at the molecular level, either in label-free mode (i.e., exploiting intrinsic autofluorescence of cells) or by the use of organic/genetically-encoded fluorescent probes. Here, relevant examples from the literature are reviewed and discussed. Based on this, new potential lines of development in the field are drawn.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- induced apoptosis
- label free
- type diabetes
- single cell
- high resolution
- cell therapy
- cell cycle arrest
- cardiovascular disease
- glycemic control
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell death
- stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- high throughput
- optical coherence tomography
- adipose tissue
- pi k akt
- weight loss
- photodynamic therapy
- quality improvement
- blood glucose
- sensitive detection
- human health