Publications by authors named "A F Spigelman"

Diabetes is associated with the dysfunction of glucagon-producing pancreatic islet α-cells, although the underlying mechanisms regulating glucagon secretion and α-cell dysfunction remain unclear. While insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells has long been known to be partly controlled by intracellular phospholipid signaling, very little is known about the role of phospholipids in glucagon secretion. Here we show that TMEM55A, a lipid phosphatase that dephosphorylates phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) to phosphatidylinositol-5-phosphate (PI5P), regulates α-cell exocytosis and glucagon secretion.

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Article Synopsis
  • - HumanIslets.com aids diabetes research by providing easy access to islet phenotyping data and analysis tools, available for download.
  • - The platform features various data types, including molecular omics, islet function assays, tissue processing metadata, and phenotypes from 547 different donors.
  • - As it grows, HumanIslets.com aims to enhance the quality, usability, and accessibility of human islet data for researchers.
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  • Colorectal cancers (CRCs) linked to biallelic germline variants show specific mutational signatures (SBS18+SBS36 and SBS30) that could also be present in adenomas, which are precursors to CRCs.
  • A study sequenced DNA from adenomas and CRCs in biallelic cases and compared them with sporadic cases to investigate these signatures.
  • Results indicated that adenomas in biallelic cases had similar mutational signature proportions as their corresponding CRCs, suggesting testing adenomas could enhance the detection of biallelic cases and improve variant classification for better CRC prevention strategies.
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Human islets from deceased organ donors have made important contributions to our understanding of pancreatic endocrine function and continue to be an important resource for research studies aimed at understanding, treating, and preventing diabetes. Understanding the impacts of isolation and culture upon the yield of human islets for research is important for planning research studies and islet distribution to distant laboratories. Here, we examine islet isolation and cell culture outcomes at the Alberta Diabetes Institute (ADI) IsletCore ( = 197).

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Population-level variation and mechanisms behind insulin secretion in response to carbohydrate, protein, and fat remain uncharacterized. We defined prototypical insulin secretion responses to three macronutrients in islets from 140 cadaveric donors, including those with type 2 diabetes. The majority of donors' islets exhibited the highest insulin response to glucose, moderate response to amino acid, and minimal response to fatty acid.

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