Pancreatic polypeptide cells

Pancreatic polypeptide cells (PP cells), or formerly as gamma cells (γ-cells), or F cells, are cells in the pancreatic islets (Islets of Langerhans) of the pancreas. Their main role is to help synthesize and regulate the release of pancreatic polypeptide (PP), after which they have been named. The pancreatic islets, where PP cells reside, was discovered in 1869 by a German pathological anatomist and scientist, Paul Langerhans. PP cells help to make up the pancreas but are smallest in proportion to the other cells previously stated. The proportions can vary based on which animals are being studied, but in humans, PP cells make up less than 2% of the pancreatic islet cell population.[1]

PP cell
  1. ^ Brereton, Melissa (2015). "Alpha-, Delta- and P-cells". The Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry. 63 (8): 575–591. doi:10.1369/0022155415583535. PMC 4530398. PMID 26216135.