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Despite treatment with agents that enhance beta-cell function and insulin action, reduction in beta-cell mass is relentless in patients with insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Insulin resistance is characterized by impaired signaling through the insulin/insulin receptor/insulin receptor substrate/PI-3K/Akt pathway, leading to elevation of negatively regulated substrates such as glycogen synthase kinase-3beta (Gsk-3beta). When elevated, this enzyme has antiproliferative and proapoptotic properties. In these studies, we designed experiments to determine the contribution of Gsk-3beta to regulation of beta-cell mass in two mouse models of insulin resistance. Mice lacking one allele of the insulin receptor (Ir+/-) exhibit insulin resistance and a doubling of beta-cell mass. Crossing these mice with those having haploinsufficiency for Gsk-3beta (Gsk-3beta+/-) reduced insulin resistance by augmenting whole-body glucose disposal, and significantly reduced beta-cell mass. In the second model, mice missing two alleles of the insulin receptor substrate 2 (Irs2-/-), like the Ir+/- mice, are insulin resistant, but develop profound beta-cell loss, resulting in early diabetes. We found that islets from these mice had a 4-fold elevation of Gsk-3beta activity associated with a marked reduction of beta-cell proliferation and increased apoptosis. Irs2-/- mice crossed with Gsk-3beta+/- mice preserved beta-cell mass by reversing the negative effects on proliferation and apoptosis, preventing onset of diabetes. Previous studies had shown that islets of Irs2-/- mice had increased cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27(kip1) that was limiting for beta-cell replication, and reduced Pdx1 levels associated with increased cell death. Preservation of beta-cell mass in Gsk-3beta+/- Irs2-/- mice was accompanied by suppressed p27(kip1) levels and increased Pdx1 levels. To separate peripheral versus beta-cell-specific effects of reduction of Gsk3beta activity on preservation of beta-cell mass, mice homozygous for a floxed Gsk-3beta allele (Gsk-3(F/F)) were then crossed with rat insulin promoter-Cre (RIP-Cre) mice to produce beta-cell-specific knockout of Gsk-3beta (betaGsk-3beta-/-). Like Gsk-3beta+/- mice, betaGsk-3beta-/- mice also prevented the diabetes of the Irs2-/- mice. The results of these studies now define a new, negatively regulated substrate of the insulin signaling pathway specifically within beta-cells that when elevated, can impair replication and increase apoptosis, resulting in loss of beta-cells and diabetes. These results thus form the rationale for developing agents to inhibit this enzyme in obese insulin-resistant individuals to preserve beta-cells and prevent diabetes onset.  相似文献   

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p8 protein expression is known to be upregulated in the exocrine pancreas during acute pancreatitis. Own previous work revealed glucose-dependent p8 expression also in endocrine pancreatic beta-cells. Here we demonstrate that glucose-induced INS-1 beta-cell expansion is preceded by p8 protein expression. Moreover, isopropylthiogalactoside (IPTG)-induced p8 overexpression in INS-1 beta-cells (p8-INS-1) enhances cell proliferation and expansion in the presence of glucose only. Although beta-cell-related gene expression (PDX-1, proinsulin I, GLUT2, glucokinase, amylin) and function (insulin content and secretion) are slightly reduced during p8 overexpression, removal of IPTG reverses beta-cell function within 24 h to normal levels. In addition, insulin secretion of p8-INS-1 beta-cells in response to 0-25 mM glucose is not altered by preceding p8-induced beta-cell expansion. Adenovirally transduced p8 overexpression in primary human pancreatic islets increases proliferation, expansion, and cumulative insulin secretion in vitro. Transplantation of mock-transduced control islets under the kidney capsule of immunosuppressed streptozotocin-diabetic mice reduces blood glucose and increases human C-peptide serum concentrations to stable levels after 3 days. In contrast, transplantation of equal numbers of p8-transduced islets results in a continuous decrease of blood glucose and increase of human C-peptide beyond 3 days, indicating p8-induced expansion of transplanted human beta-cells in vivo. This is underlined by a doubling of insulin content in kidneys containing p8-transduced islet grafts explanted on day 9. These results establish p8 as a novel molecular mediator of glucose-induced pancreatic beta-cell expansion in vitro and in vivo and support the notion of existing beta-cell replication in the adult organism.  相似文献   

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Pancreatic beta-cell-restricted knockout of the insulin receptor results in hyperglycemia due to impaired insulin secretion, suggesting that this cell is an important target of insulin action. The present studies were undertaken in beta-cell insulin receptor knockout (betaIRKO) mice to define the mechanisms underlying the defect in insulin secretion. On the basis of responses to intraperitoneal glucose, approximately 7-mo-old betaIRKO mice were either diabetic (25%) or normally glucose tolerant (75%). Total insulin content was profoundly reduced in pancreata of mutant mice compared with controls. Both groups also exhibited reduced beta-cell mass and islet number. However, insulin mRNA and protein were similar in islets of diabetic and normoglycemic betaIRKO mice compared with controls. Insulin secretion in response to insulin secretagogues from the isolated perfused pancreas was markedly reduced in the diabetic betaIRKOs and to a lesser degree in the nondiabetic betaIRKO group. Pancreatic islets of nondiabetic betaIRKO animals also exhibited defects in glyceraldehyde- and KCl-stimulated insulin release that were milder than in the diabetic animals. Gene expression analysis of islets revealed a modest reduction of GLUT2 and glucokinase gene expression in both the nondiabetic and diabetic mutants. Taken together, these data indicate that loss of functional receptors for insulin in beta-cells leads primarily to profound defects in postnatal beta-cell growth. In addition, altered glucose sensing may also contribute to defective insulin secretion in mutant animals that develop diabetes.  相似文献   

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Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) is normally produced from hepatocytes and various other cells and tissues, including the pancreas, and is known to stimulate islet cell replication in vitro, prevent Fas-mediated beta-cell destruction and delay the onset of diabetes in nonobese diabetic mice. Recently, however, the notion that IGF-I stimulates islet cell growth has been challenged by the results of IGF-I and receptor gene targeting. To test the effects of a general, more profound increase in circulating IGF-I on islet cell growth and glucose homeostasis, we have characterized MT-IGF mice, which overexpress the IGF-I gene under the metallothionein I promoter. In early reports, a 1.5-fold-elevated serum IGF-I level caused accelerated somatic growth and pancreatic enlargement. We demonstrated that the transgene expression, although widespread, was highly concentrated in the beta-cells of the pancreatic islets. Yet, islet cell percent and pancreatic morphology were unaffected. IGF-I overexpression resulted in significant hypoglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, and improved glucose tolerance but normal insulin secretion and sensitivity. Pyruvate tolerance test indicated significantly suppressed hepatic gluconeogenesis, which might explain the severe hypoglycemia after fasting. Finally, due to a partial prevention of beta-cell death against onset of diabetes and/or the insulin-like effects of IGF-I overexpression, MT-IGF mice (which overexpress the IGF-I gene under the metallothionein I promoter) were significantly resistant to streptozotocin-induced diabetes, with diminished hyperglycemia and prevention of weight loss and death. Although IGF-I might not promote islet cell growth, its overexpression is clearly antidiabetic by improving islet cell survival and/or providing insulin-like effects.  相似文献   

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The Irs2 branch of the insulin/insulin-like growth factor signaling cascade activates the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase --> Akt --> Foxo1 cascade in many tissues, including hepatocytes and pancreatic beta-cells. The 3'-lipid phosphatase Pten ordinarily attenuates this cascade; however, its influence on beta-cell growth or function is unknown. To determine whether decreased Pten expression could restore beta-cell function and prevent diabetes in Irs2(-/-) mice, we generated wild type or Irs2 knock-out mice that were haploinsufficient for Pten (Irs2(-/-)::Pten(+/-)). Irs2(-/-) mice develop diabetes by 3 months of age as beta-cell mass declined progressively until insulin production was lost. Pten insufficiency increased peripheral insulin sensitivity in wild type and Irs2(-/-) mice and increased Akt and Foxo1 phosphorylation in the islets. Glucose tolerance improved in the Pten(+/-) mice, although beta-cell mass and circulating insulin levels decreased. Compared with Irs2(-/-) mice, the Irs2(-/-)::Pten(+/-) mice displayed nearly normal glucose tolerance and survived without diabetes, because normal but small islets produced sufficient insulin until the mice died of lymphoproliferative disease at 12 months age. Thus, steps to enhance phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling can promote beta-cell growth, function, and survival without the Irs2 branch of the insulin/insulin-like growth factor signaling cascade.  相似文献   

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To determine the role of cholesterol synthesis in pancreatic beta-cells, a transgenic model of in vivo activation of sterol-regulatory element binding protein 2 (SREBP-2) specifically in beta-cells (TgRIP-SREBP-2) was developed and analyzed. Expression of nuclear human SREBP-2 in beta-cells resulted in severe diabetes as evidenced by greater than 5-fold elevations in glycohemoglobin compared with C57BL/6 controls. Diabetes in TgRIP-SREBP-2 mice was primarily due to defects in glucose- and potassium-stimulated insulin secretion as determined by glucose tolerance test. Isolated islets of TgSREBP-2 mice were fewer in number, smaller, deformed, and had decreased insulin content. SREBP-2-expressing islets also contained increased esterified cholesterol and unchanged triglycerides with reduced ATP levels. Consistently, these islets exhibited elevated expression of HMG-CoA synthase and reductase and LDL receptor, with suppression of endogenous SREBPs. Genes involved in beta-cell differentiation, such as PDX1 and BETA2, were suppressed, explaining loss of beta-cell mass, whereas IRS2 expression was not affected. These phenotypes were dependent on the transgene expression. Taken together, these results indicate that activation of SREBP-2 in beta-cells caused severe diabetes by loss of beta-cell mass with accumulation of cholesterol, providing a new lipotoxic model and a potential link of disturbed cholesterol metabolism to impairment of beta-cell function.  相似文献   

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Type 2 diabetes is characterized by both peripheral insulin resistance and reduced insulin secretion by beta-cells. The reasons for beta-cell dysfunction in this disease are incompletely understood but may include the accumulation of toxic lipids within this cell type. We examined the role of Abca1, a cellular cholesterol transporter, in cholesterol homeostasis and insulin secretion in beta-cells. Mice with specific inactivation of Abca1 in beta-cells had markedly impaired glucose tolerance and defective insulin secretion but normal insulin sensitivity. Islets isolated from these mice showed altered cholesterol homeostasis and impaired insulin secretion in vitro. We found that rosiglitazone, an activator of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma, which upregulates Abca1 in beta-cells, requires beta-cell Abca1 for its beneficial effects on glucose tolerance. These experiments establish a new role for Abca1 in beta-cell cholesterol homeostasis and insulin secretion, and suggest that cholesterol accumulation may contribute to beta-cell dysfunction in type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

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Type 2 diabetes mellitus is characterized by insulin resistance of peripheral tissues and dysfunction of pancreatic beta-cells. Furthermore, the number of pancreatic beta-cells decreases as a secondary effect of advanced type 2 diabetes, although the molecular mechanism has not been elucidated. Recently, it has been shown that hyperglycemic conditions induce the expression of cyclooxygenase-2 in pancreatic islets and increase the downstream product prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)). To investigate whether high glucose-induced PGE(2) has an adverse effect on pancreatic beta-cells, we generated transgenic mice (RIP-C2mE) that express cyclooxygenase-2 and microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1 in their beta-cells using the rat insulin-2 gene promoter (RIP). The homozygous RIP-C2mE (Tg/Tg) mice showed severe hyperglycemia from six weeks of age. Although the heterozygous RIP-C2mE (Tg/-) mice showed normal blood glucose levels throughout their lifetime, this level increased significantly compared with that of wild-type mice when glucose was loaded. The relative number of beta-cells to the total islet cell number was reduced to 54 and 14% in the RIP-C2mE (Tg/-) and (Tg/Tg) mice, respectively, whereas that in the wild-type mice was 84%. Importantly, the proliferation rate in the islets of the RIP-C2mE (Tg/Tg) mice at four weeks of age decreased significantly in comparison to that in the wild-type mice. Because beta-cells replicate not only during the postnatal period but also in the adult pancreas at a basal level, it is possible that increased PGE(2) signaling thus contributes to the reduction of the pancreatic beta-cell mass through inhibition of proliferation, thereby aggravating diabetes further.  相似文献   

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The insulin/insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) signalling pathways are present in most mammalian cells and play important roles in the growth and metabolism of tissues. Most proteins in these pathways have also been identified in the beta-cells of the pancreatic islets. Tissue-specific knockout of the insulin receptor (betaIRKO) or IGF-1 receptor (betaIGFRKO) in pancreatic beta-cells leads to altered glucose-sensing and glucose intolerance in adult mice, and betaIRKO mice show an age-dependent decrease in islet size and beta-cell mass. These data indicate that these receptors are important for differentiated function and are unlikely to play a major role in the early growth and/or development of the pancreatic islets. Conventional insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) knockouts manifest growth retardation and mild insulin resistance. The IRS-1 knockouts also display islet hyperplasia, defects in insulin secretory responses to multiple stimuli both in vivo and in vitro, reduced islet insulin content and an increased number of autophagic vacuoles in the beta-cells. Re-expression of IRS-1 in cultured beta-cells is able to partially restore the insulin content indicating that IRS-1 is involved in the regulation of insulin synthesis. Taken together, these data provide evidence that insulin and IGF-1 receptors and IRS-1, and potentially other proteins in the insulin/IGF-1 signalling pathway, contribute to the regulation of islet hormone secretion and synthesis and therefore in the maintenance of glucose homeostasis.  相似文献   

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Alteration of pancreatic beta-cell survival and Preproinsulin gene expression by prolonged hyperglycemia may result from increased c-MYC expression. However, it is unclear whether c-MYC effects on beta-cell function are compatible with its proposed role in glucotoxicity. We therefore tested the effects of short-term c-MYC activation on key beta-cell stimulus-secretion coupling events in islets isolated from mice expressing a tamoxifen-switchable form of c-MYC in beta-cells (MycER) and their wild-type littermates. Tamoxifen treatment of wild-type islets did not affect their cell survival, Preproinsulin gene expression, and glucose stimulus-secretion coupling. In contrast, tamoxifen-mediated c-MYC activation for 2-3 days triggered cell apoptosis and decreased Preproinsulin gene expression in MycER islets. These effects were accompanied by mitochondrial membrane hyperpolarization at all glucose concentrations, a higher resting intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)), and lower glucose-induced [Ca(2+)](i) rise and islet insulin content, leading to a strong reduction of glucose-induced insulin secretion. Compared with these effects, 1-wk culture in 30 mmol/l glucose increased the islet sensitivity to glucose stimulation without reducing the maximal glucose effectiveness or the insulin content. In contrast, overnight exposure to a low H(2)O(2) concentration increased the islet resting [Ca(2+)](i) and reduced the amplitude of the maximal glucose response as in tamoxifen-treated MycER islets. In conclusion, c-MYC activation rapidly stimulates apoptosis, reduces Preproinsulin gene expression and insulin content, and triggers functional alterations of beta-cells that are better mimicked by overnight exposure to a low H(2)O(2) concentration than by prolonged culture in high glucose.  相似文献   

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The FRK tyrosine kinase has previously been shown to transduce beta-cell cytotoxic signals in response to cytokines and streptozotocin and to promote beta-cell proliferation and an increased beta-cell mass. We therefore aimed to further evaluate the effects of overexpression of FRK tyrosine kinase in beta-cells. A transgenic mouse expressing kinase-active FRK under control of the insulin promoter (RIP-FRK) was studied with regard to islet endocrine function and vascular morphology. Mild glucose intolerance develops in RIP-FRK male mice of at least 4 mo of age. This effect is accompanied by reduced glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in vivo and reduced second-phase insulin secretion in response to glucose and arginine upon pancreas perfusion. Islets isolated from the FRK transgenic mice display a glucose-induced insulin secretory response in vitro similar to that of control islets. However, islet blood flow per islet volume is decreased in the FRK transgenic mice. These mice also exhibit a reduced islet capillary lumen diameter as shown by electron microscopy. Total body weight and pancreas weight are not significantly affected, but the beta-cell mass is increased. The data suggest that long-term expression of active FRK in beta-cells causes an in vivo insulin-secretory defect, which may be the consequence of islet vascular abnormalities that yield a decreased islet blood flow.  相似文献   

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Type 1 and type 2 diabetes result from a deficit in insulin production and beta-cell mass. Methods to expand beta-cell mass are under intensive investigation for the treatment of type 1 and type 2 diabetes. We tested the hypothesis that cholecystokinin (CCK) can promote beta-cell proliferation. We treated isolated mouse and human islets with an adenovirus containing the CCK cDNA (AdCMV-CCK). We measured [(3)H]thymidine and BrdU incorporation into DNA and additionally, performed flow cytometry analysis to determine whether CCK overexpression stimulates beta-cell proliferation. We studied islet function by measuring glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and investigated the cell cycle regulation of proliferating beta-cells by quantitative RT-PCR and Western blot analysis. Overexpression of CCK stimulated [(3)H]thymidine incorporation into DNA 5.0-fold and 15.8-fold in mouse and human islets, respectively. AdCMV-CCK treatment also stimulated BrdU incorporation into DNA 10-fold and 21-fold in mouse and human beta-cells, respectively. Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion was unaffected by CCK expression. Analysis of cyclin and cdk mRNA and protein abundance revealed that CCK overexpression increased cyclin A, cyclin B, cyclin E, cdk1, and cdk2 with no change in cyclin D1, cyclin D2, cyclin D3, cdk4, or cdk6 in mouse and human islets. Additionally, AdCMV-CCK treatment of CCK receptor knockout and wild-type mice resulted in equal [(3)H]thymidine incorporation. CCK is a beta-cell proliferative factor that is effective in both mouse and human islets. CCK triggers beta-cell proliferation without disrupting islet function, up-regulates a distinct set of cell cycle regulators in islets, and signals independently of the CCK receptors.  相似文献   

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Intermittent restraint stress delays hyperglycemia in ZDF rats better than pair feeding. We hypothesized that intermittent stress would preserve beta-cell mass through distinct mechanisms from food restriction. We studied temporal effects of intermittent stress on beta-cell compensation during pre-, early, and late diabetes. Six-week-old obese male ZDF rats were restraint-stressed 1 h/day, 5 days/wk for 0, 3, 6, or 13 wk and compared with age-matched obese ZDF rats that had been food restricted for 13 wk, and 19-wk-old lean ZDF rats. Thirteen weeks of stress and food restriction lowered cumulative food intake 10-15%. Obese islets were fibrotic and disorganized and not improved by stress or food restriction. Obese pancreata had islet hyperplasia and showed evidence of neogenesis, but by 19 wk old beta-cell mass was not increased, and islets had fewer beta-cells that were hypertrophic. Both stress and food restriction partially preserved beta-cell mass at 19 wk old via islet hypertrophy, whereas stress additionally lowered alpha-cell mass. Concomitant with maintenance of insulin responses to glucose, stress delayed the sixfold decline in beta-cell proliferation and reduced beta-cell hypertrophy, translating into 30% more beta-cells per islet after 13 wk. In contrast, food restriction did not improve insulin responses or beta-cell hyperplasia, exacerbated beta-cell hypertrophy, and resulted in fewer beta-cells and greater alpha-cell mass than with stress. Thus, preservation of beta-cell mass with adaptation to intermittent stress is related to beta-cell hyperplasia, maintenance of insulin responses to glucose, and reductions in alpha-cell mass that do not occur with food restriction.  相似文献   

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