AI Article Synopsis

  • The cortical cytoskeleton is a dense layer of actin filaments just below the cell membrane in animal cells, especially in insulin-secreting beta cells.
  • A long-held belief was that this actin layer stops insulin from reaching the cell surface.
  • New experiments show that changes to the actin layer don’t really affect insulin release, suggesting that other factors help control insulin secretion instead. *

Article Abstract

Just under the plasma membrane of most animal cells lies a dense meshwork of actin filaments called the cortical cytoskeleton. In insulin-secreting pancreatic β cells, a long-standing model posits that the cortical actin layer primarily acts to restrict access of insulin granules to the plasma membrane. Here we test this model and find that stimulating β cells with pro-secretory stimuli (glucose and/or KCl) has little impact on the cortical actin layer. Chemical perturbations of actin polymerization, by either disrupting or enhancing filamentation, dramatically enhance glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Using scanning electron microscopy, we directly visualize the cortical cytoskeleton, allowing us to validate the effect of these filament-disrupting chemicals. We find the state of the cortical actin layer does not correlate with levels of insulin secretion, suggesting filament disruptors act on insulin secretion independently of the cortical cytoskeleton.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10641669PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2023.105334DOI Listing

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