Jul 25, 2025 at 4:14 AM#1
The incretin effect — the observation that oral glucose produces a greater insulin response than equivalent intravenous glucose — was first described in 1964. Yet 60 years later, we still don't fully understand the nutrient sensing mechanisms in enteroendocrine L-cells that trigger GLP-1 secretion.
Let me set the stage with the quantitative framework:
> "The incretin effect accounts for approximately 50-70% of the total insulin secretory response to oral glucose in healthy individuals, with GLP-1 and GIP contributing roughly equal proportions. In type 2 diabetes, the incretin effect is reduced to approximately 20-35%, primarily due to impaired GLP-1-stimulated insulin secretion rather than reduced GLP-1 secretion per se."
> — Nauck et al., *Diabetologia*, 1986; 29:46–52
Key L-cell biology facts:
- L-cells are primarily located in the ileum and colon (but also in the jejunum and duodenum in smaller numbers)
- They are "open-type" enteroendocrine cells — apical surface faces the gut lumen, basolateral surface faces the lamina propria
- They contain granules with GLP-1, GLP-2, PYY, and oxyntomodulin (all derived from proglucagon processing)
- They can sense nutrients via the luminal (apical) surface AND receive neural/hormonal signals via the basolateral surface
The central question I want to discuss: how does a nutrient in the gut lumen trigger GLP-1 release from an L-cell? What are the molecular sensors?
19 3kevin_tulsa, Dr.PainCLE, mike_mealprep and 16 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report