Phylogenetical Aspects on Islet Hormone Families: a Minireview with Particular Reference to Insulin As a Growth Factor and to the Phylogeny of PYY and NPY Immunoreactive Cells and Nerves in the Endocrine and Exocrine Pancreas
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A common feature in the phylogeny of the four islet hormones (insulin, somatostatin, glucagon, PP) is that they do not seem to occur in the most primitive metazoan animals investigated so far, namely the coelenterates. However, already in the earliest protostomian invertebrates, such as flatworms and annelids, somatostatin and PP immunoreactive nerve fibres were found. In highly developed forms of protostomian invertebrates, such as insects, all the four islet hormones are represented as immunoreactive nerve cells and nerve fibres in the brain. In deuterostomian invertebrates a brain-gut-axis has evolved as regards somatostatin and PP, whereas insulin and glucagon now seem to occur exclusively as cells of open type in the gut mucosa. This brain-gut-axis for somatostatin and PP persists in all the vertebrates. The insulin cells, however, leave the gut mucosa already in the earliest forms of vertebrates and then appear only as cells in the islet parenchyma and in the mucosa of the bile duct (Agnatha) or in the pancreatic ducts (Gnathostomi). To some extent, glucagon islet cells evolve in a similar manner; here, however, cells immunoreactive with the precursor hormone, glicentin (enteroglucagon), persist in the gastrointestinal tract mucosa. A few PYY immunoreactive cells have been found in the pancreatic islet parenchyma of reptiles and mammals, often as disseminated cells in the acinar tissue. In the pancreas of these phyla NPY only occurs in neurons and nerve fibres. In pilot studies the effects of hagfish insulin as a growth factor have been compared with those of pig insulin on Swiss 3T3 mouse embryonic fibroblasts.
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