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1.
The insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) is produced in the liver and is considered mediating the effect of the growth hormone (GH). However, a knock-out only in liver IGF-I slightly disturbs the growth and development of mice. Such mice develop insulin resistance of various organs, including muscles. A knock-out in the liver insulin gene also results in insulin resistance. Selective inactivation of the gene for glucokinase (a target of insulin) in pancreatic islets or in the liver suppresses insulin secretion in the pancreas.  相似文献   

2.
To explore the limitations of the liver-specific IGF-I gene-deficient (LID) model and to further evaluate the role of endocrine IGF-I in early postnatal life and old age, we have studied these mice during the prepubertal period (from birth to 3 wk of age) and when they are 2 yr old. During the first 2 wk of life, IGF-I gene deficiency and the resulting reduction in serum IGF-I levels in LID mice did not reach sufficiently low levels when mice experience the most rapid and growth hormone (GH)-independent growth. It suggests that the role of liver-derived IGF-I in prepubertal, GH-independent postnatal growth cannot be established. From our previous studies, liver IGF-I mRNA level was abolished in adult LID mice, which causes elevated GH level, insulin resistance, pancreatic islet enlargement, and hyperinsulinemia. Interestingly in 2-yr-old LID mice, although liver IGF-I mRNA and serum IGF-I levels were still suppressed, serum insulin and GH levels had returned to normal. Compared with same-sex control littermates, aged male LID mice had significantly reduced body weight and fat mass and exhibited normal insulin sensitivity. On the other hand, aged female LID mice exhibited normal weight and marginal resistance to insulin actions. The pancreatic islet percentage (reflecting islet cell mass) was also restored to normal levels in aged LID mice. Thus, although the IGF-I gene deficiency is well maintained into old age, the insulin sensitivity, islet enlargement, and hyperinsulinemia that occurred in young adult mice have been mostly restored to normal levels, further supporting the age-dependent and sexual dimorphic features of the LID mice.  相似文献   

3.
Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) has significant structural homology with insulin. IGF-I has been shown to bind to insulin receptors to stimulate glucose transport in fat and muscle, to inhibit hepatic glucose output and to lower blood glucose while simultaneously suppressing insulin secretion. However, the precise role of IGF-I in maintaining normal glucose homeostasis and insulin sensitivity is not well defined. Studies in patients with diabetes have shown that in insulin-deficient states, serum IGF-I concentrations are low and increase with insulin therapy. Similarly, administration of insulin via the portal vein results in optimization of plasma IGF-I concentrations. A patient with an IGF1 gene deletion was shown to have severe insulin resistance that improved with IGF-I therapy. Studies conducted in experimental animals have shown that if IGF-I synthesis by the liver is deleted, the animals become insulin-resistant, and this is improved when IGF-I is administered. Likewise, deletion of the IGF-I receptor in muscle in mice induces severe insulin resistance. Administration of IGF-I to patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus has been shown to result in an improvement in insulin sensitivity and a reduction in the requirement for exogenously administered insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis. A polymorphism in the IGF1 gene that has been shown to reduce serum IGF-I results in an increased prevalence of type 2 diabetes. Taken together, these findings support the conclusion that IGF-I is necessary for normal insulin sensitivity, and impairment of IGF-I synthesis results in a worsening state of insulin resistance.  相似文献   

4.
Growth hormone (GH), acting through its receptor (GHR), is essential for somatic growth and development and maintaining metabolic homeostasis. GHR gene-deficient (GHR(-/-)) mice exhibit drastically diminished insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) levels, proportional growth retardation, elevated insulin sensitivity, and reduced islet beta-cell mass. Unlike the liver, which is mostly unaffected by changes in IGF-I level, skeletal muscles express high levels of IGF-I receptor (IGF-IR). The net result of a concurrent deficiency in the actions of both GH and IGF-I, which exert opposite influences on insulin responsiveness, has not been evaluated. We studied insulin-stimulated early responses in the insulin receptor (IR), insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1), and p85 subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. Upon in vivo insulin stimulation, skeletal muscles of GHR(-/-) mice exhibit transient delayed responses in IR and IRS-1 phosphorylation but normal levels of p85 association with IRS-1. This is in contrast to normal/elevated insulin responses in hepatocytes and indicates tissue-specific effects of GHR gene deficiency. In addition to stimulating normal islet cell growth, GH may participate in islet cell overgrowth, which compensates for insulin resistance induced by obesity. To determine whether the islet cell overgrowth is dependent on GH signaling, we studied the response of male GHR(-/-) mice to high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity. After 17 wk on a HFD, GHR(-/-) mice became more significantly obese than wild-type mice and exhibited increased beta-cell mass to a slightly higher extent. These data demonstrate that GH signaling is not required for compensatory islet growth. Thus, in both muscle insulin responsiveness and islet growth compensation, normal levels of GH signals do not seem to play a dominant role.  相似文献   

5.
Many growth factors and hormones modulate the reproductive status in mammals. Among these, insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) regulate the development of gonadal tissues. SH2-B has been shown to interact with insulin and IGF-I receptors, although the role of SH2-B in these signals has not been clarified. To investigate the role of SH2-B, we generated mice with a targeted disruption of the SH2-B gene. Both male and female SH2-B(-/-) mice showed slight retardation in growth and impaired fertility. Female knockout mice possess small, anovulatory ovaries with reduced numbers of follicles and male SH2-B(-/-) mice have small testes with a reduced number of sperm. SH2-B(-/-) cumulus cells do not respond to either follicle-stimulating hormone or IGF-I. These data suggest that SH2-B plays a critical role in the IGF-I-mediated reproductive pathway in mice.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Our conditional VHL knockout (VHL-KO) mice, having VHL gene deletion induced by tamoxifen, developed severe hypoglycemia associated with disproportionately increased storage of PAS-positive substances in the liver and resulted in the death of these mice. This hypoglycemic state was neither due to impaired insulin secretion nor insulin receptor hypersensitivity. By focusing on insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), which has a similar effect on glucose metabolism as the insulin receptor, we demonstrated that IGF-I receptor (IGF-IR) protein expression in the liver was upregulated in VHL-KO mice compared to that in the mice without VHL deletion, as was the expression of glucose transporter (GLUT) 1. The interaction of the receptor for activated C kinase (RACK) 1, which predominantly binds to VHL, was enhanced in VHL-KO livers with IGF-IR, because VHL deletion increased free RACK1 and facilitated the IGF-IR-RACKI interaction. An IGF-IR antagonist retarded hypoglycemic progression and sustained an euglycemic state. These IGF-IR antagonist effects on restoring blood glucose levels also attenuated PAS-positive substance storage in the liver. Because the effect of IGF-I on HIF-1α protein synthesis is mediated by IGF-IR, our results indicated that VHL inactivation accelerated hepatic glucose storage through the upregulation of IGF-IR and GLUT1 and that IGF-IR was a key regulator in VHL-deficient hepatocytes.  相似文献   

8.
The liver plays a central role in the control of glucose homeostasis and is subject to complex regulation by substrates, insulin, and other hormones. To investigate the effect of the loss of direct insulin action in liver, we have used the Cre-loxP system to inactivate the insulin receptor gene in hepatocytes. Liver-specific insulin receptor knockout (LIRKO) mice exhibit dramatic insulin resistance, severe glucose intolerance, and a failure of insulin to suppress hepatic glucose production and to regulate hepatic gene expression. These alterations are paralleled by marked hyperinsulinemia due to a combination of increased insulin secretion and decreased insulin clearance. With aging, the LIRKO liver exhibits morphological and functional changes, and the metabolic phenotype becomes less severe. Thus, insulin signaling in liver is critical in regulating glucose homeostasis and maintaining normal hepatic function.  相似文献   

9.
Both IGF-I and its receptor (IGF-IR) are specifically expressed in various cell types of the endocrine pancreas. IGF-I has long been considered a growth factor for islet cells as it induces DNA synthesis in a glucose-dependent manner, prevents Fas-mediated autoimmune β-cell destruction and delays onset of diabetes in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice. Islet-specific IGF-I overexpression promotes islet cell regeneration in diabetic mice. However, in the last few years, results from most gene-targeted mice have challenged this view. For instance, combined inactivation of insulin receptor and IGF-IR or IGF-I and IGF-II genes in early embryos results in no defect on islet cell development; islet β-cell-specific inactivation of IGF-IR gene causes no change in β-cell mass; liver- and pancreatic-specific IGF-I gene deficiency (LID and PID mice) suggests that IGF-I exerts an inhibitory effect on islet cell growth albeit indirectly through controlling growth hormone release or expression of Reg family genes. These results need to be evaluated with potential gene redundancy, model limitations, indirect effects and ligand-receptor cross-activations within the insulin/IGF family. Although IGF-I causes islet β-cell proliferation and neogenesis directly, what occur in normal physiology, pathophysiology or during development of an organism might be different. Locally produced and systemic IGF-I does not seem to play a positive role in islet cell growth. Rather, it is probably a negative regulator through controlling growth hormone and insulin release, hyperglycemia, or Reg gene expression. These results complicate the perspective of an IGF-I therapy for β-cell loss.  相似文献   

10.
We previously found that disruption of Kir6.2-containing ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels increases glucose uptake in skeletal muscle, but the mechanism is not clear. In the present study, we generated knockout mice lacking both Kir6.2 and insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1). Because IRS-1 is the major substrate of insulin receptor kinase, we expected disruption of the IRS-1 gene to reduce glucose uptake in Kir6.2 knockout mice. However, the double-knockout mice do not develop insulin resistance or glucose intolerance. An insulin tolerance test reveals the glucose-lowering effect of exogenous insulin in double-knockout mice and in Kir6.2 knockout mice to be similarly enhanced compared with wild-type mice. The basal 2-deoxyglucose uptake rate in skeletal muscle of double-knockout mice is increased similarly to the rate in Kir6.2 knockout mice. Accordingly, disruption of the IRS-1 gene affects neither systemic insulin sensitivity nor glucose uptake in skeletal muscles of Kir6.2-deficient mice. In addition, no significant changes were observed in phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) activity and its downstream signal in skeletal muscle due to lack of the Kir6.2 gene. Disruption of Kir6.2-containing Katp channels clearly protects against IRS-1-associated insulin resistance by increasing glucose uptake in skeletal muscles by a mechanism separate from the IRS-1/PI3K pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Development of diabetes generally reflects an inadequate mass of insulin-producing beta-cells. beta-cell proliferation and differentiation are regulated by a variety of growth factors and hormones, including insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). GRF1 is a Ras-guanine nucleotide exchange factor known previously for its restricted expression in brain and its role in learning and memory. Here we demonstrate that GRF1 is also expressed in pancreatic islets. Interestingly, our GRF1-deficient mice exhibit reduced body weight, hypoinsulinemia and glucose intolerance owing to a reduction of beta-cells. Whereas insulin resistance is not detected in peripheral tissues, GRF1 knockout mice are leaner due to increased lipid catabolism. The reduction in circulating insulin does not reflect defective glucose sensing or insulin production but results from impaired beta-cell proliferation and reduced neogenesis. IGF-I treatment of isolated islets from GRF1 knockouts fails to activate critical downstream signals such as Akt and Erk. The observed phenotype is similar to manifestations of preclinical type 2 diabetes. Thus, our observations demonstrate a novel and specific role for Ras-GRF1 pathways in the development and maintenance of normal beta-cell number and function.  相似文献   

12.
It is known that growth hormone (GH) plays an important role in growth and development.Additionally, emerging evidence suggest that it also influences hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal function. We have found that GH from different species has different effects in mice. In rodents, human GH (hGH) binds to both GH and prolactin (PRL) receptors; it has both somatotrophic and lactotrophic effects. Since PRL has a profound effect on neuroendocrine function, the results obtained from hGH treatment or from transgenic animals expressing the hGH gene reflect PRL-like effects of this hormone. However, bovine GH (bGH) is purely somatogenic and therefore the effects of bGH represent the function of the natural GH produced in rodents. Furthermore, our studies in mice and rats have shown that not all effects of GH are stimulatory and the duration of exposure of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal-gonadal system to GH might influence the secretions of gonadotropins and gonadal steroids. In humans, excess productions of GH in acromegaly and GH resistance in Laron syndrome adversely affect reproduction. Similarly, it has been demonstrated that in transgenic mice expressing various GH genes, in insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) gene-knockout mice, in GH receptor gene-disrupted (GHR-KO) mice, and in Ames dwarf mice the onset of puberty and/or fertility is altered. Therefore, excess or subnormal secretion of GH can affect reproduction. We have shown that the hypothalamic-pituitary functions are affected in transgenic mice expressing the GH genes, Ames dwarf mice and in GH receptor gene knockout mice. The majority of the GH effects are mediated via IGF-I and the aforementioned effects may be due to the GH-induced IGF-I secretion or due to the absence of this peptide production. It is important to realize that the syntheses and actions of IGF binding proteins are controlled by IGF-I. Furthermore, some IGF binding proteins can inhibit IGF-I action. Therefore, the concentrations of IGF binding proteins and the ratio of these binding proteins and IGF-I within the body might play a pivotal role in modulating IGF-I effects on the neuroendocrine-gonadal system.  相似文献   

13.
Although the primary control of gonadotropin secretion is by the hypothalamic GnRH and the gonadal function is controlled by the pituitary gonadotropins and prolactin, the emerging evidence suggests a vital role of the somatotropic axis, growth hormone (GH), and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) in the control of the pituitary and gonadal functions. It has been shown that GH deficiency, GH resistance, and experimental alterations in IGF-I secretion modify folliculogenesis, ovarian maturation, ovulation, and pregnancy, and in the male, GH/IGF-I plays an important role in spermatogenesis and the Leydig cell function. The primary focus of this review is to examine the role of GH/ IGF-I on the onset of puberty, fertility, pituitary, and gonadal endocrine functions. A number of studies have revealed that fertility is affected in GH-deficient dwarf and in IGF-I gene-ablated mice, possibly due to subnormal function of either the pituitary gland or the gonads. In the female GH receptor gene knockout (GHR-KO) mice, there was impairment in follicular development, ovulation rate, sexual maturation, production of and responsiveness to pheromonal signals, and the corpus luteum function. In IGF-I-deficient male GHR-KO mice, puberty is delayed, spermatogenesis is affected, and neuroendocrine-gonadal function is attenuated. Similarly, in some of the human Laron syndrome patients, puberty is delayed due to GH resistance. These data suggest that, in addition to GnRH and gonadotropins, GH/IGF-I influences the pituitary and gonadal functions in animals and humans.  相似文献   

14.
Obesity is associated with inflammation and increased expression of suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS) proteins, which inhibit cytokine and insulin signaling. Thus, reducing SOCS expression could prevent the development of obesity-induced insulin resistance. Using SOCS-1 knockout mice, we investigated the contribution of SOCS-1 in the development of insulin resistance induced by a high-fat diet (HFD). SOCS-1 knockout mice on HFD gained 70% more weight, displayed a 2.3-fold increase in epididymal fat pads mass and increased hepatic lipid content. This was accompanied by increased mRNA expression of leptin and the macrophage marker CD68 in white adipose tissue and of SREBP1c and FAS in liver. HFD also induced hyperglycemia in SOCS-1 deficient mice with impairment of glucose and insulin tolerance tests. Thus, despite the role of SOCS proteins in obesity-related insulin resistance, SOCS-1 deficiency alone is not able to prevent insulin resistance induced by a diet rich in fat.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Myotonic dystrophy 1 (MD1) is caused by a CTG expansion in the 3′-unstranslated region of the myotonic dystrophy protein kinase (DMPK) gene. MD1 patients frequently present insulin resistance and increased visceral adiposity. We examined whether DMPK deficiency is a genetic risk factor for high-fat diet-induced adiposity and insulin resistance using the DMPK knockout mouse model. We found that high-fat fed DMPK knockout mice had significantly increased body weights, hypertrophic adipocytes and whole-body insulin resistance compared with wild-type mice. This nutrient-genome interaction should be considered by physicians given the cardiometabolic risks and sedentary lifestyle associated with MD1 patients.  相似文献   

17.
The hepatitis C virus (HCV) core protein is a component of nucleocapsids and a pathogenic factor for hepatitis C. Several epidemiological and experimental studies have suggested that HCV infection is associated with insulin resistance, leading to type 2 diabetes. We have previously reported that HCV core gene-transgenic (PA28gamma(+/+)CoreTg) mice develop marked insulin resistance and that the HCV core protein is degraded in the nucleus through a PA28gamma-dependent pathway. In this study, we examined whether PA28gamma is required for HCV core-induced insulin resistance in vivo. HCV core gene-transgenic mice lacking the PA28gamma gene (PA28gamma(-/-)CoreTg) were prepared by mating of PA28gamma(+/+)CoreTg with PA28gamma-knockout mice. Although there was no significant difference in the glucose tolerance test results among the mice, the insulin sensitivity in PA28gamma(-/-)CoreTg mice was recovered to a normal level in the insulin tolerance test. Tyrosine phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS1), production of IRS2, and phosphorylation of Akt were suppressed in the livers of PA28gamma(+/+)CoreTg mice in response to insulin stimulation, whereas they were restored in the livers of PA28gamma(-/-)CoreTg mice. Furthermore, activation of the tumor necrosis factor alpha promoter in human liver cell lines or mice by the HCV core protein was suppressed by the knockdown or knockout of the PA28gamma gene. These results suggest that the HCV core protein suppresses insulin signaling through a PA28gamma-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is a proinflammatory cytokine that has a central action to reduce food intake and body weight. Consistent with this, GM-CSF knockout mice are more obese and hyperphagic than wild-type mice. However, in lung, GM-CSF is an important determinant of macrophage infiltration. Consequently, we sought to determine if GM-CSF might contribute to adipose tissue macrophage accumulation, insulin resistance, and low-grade inflammation that occurs when animals gain weight on a high-fat diet (HFD). We therefore determined how targeted genetic disruption of GM-CSF can affect adipose tissue macrophage and cytokine gene expression as well as glucose homeostasis by performing hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps. The number of macrophages and CCR2 gene expression in adipose tissue of GM-CSF knockout mice was decreased relative to those in wild-type mice, and the adipocyte size of mesenteric fat was increased in GM-CSF knockout mice on a HFD compared with wild-type mice. The level of mRNA of the proinflammatory cytokines interleukin-1beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha was significantly lower in mesenteric fat of GM-CSF knockout mice on the HFD than in wild-type mice. Using the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp technique, GM-CSF knockout mice had greater overall insulin sensitivity. This increase was due to enhanced peripheral uptake and utilization of glucose rather than to increased hepatic insulin sensitivity. Collectively, the data suggest that the GM-CSF knockout mutation ameliorates peripheral insulin resistance in spite of increased adiposity by reducing inflammation in adipose tissue in response to a HFD.  相似文献   

19.
Skeletal growth, taking place in the cartilaginous growth plates of long bones, consumes high levels of glucose for both metabolic and anabolic purposes. We previously showed that Glut4 is present in growing bone and is decreased in diabetes. In the present study, we examined the hypothesis that in bone, GLUT4 gene expression and function are regulated via the IGF-I receptor (IGF-IR) and that Glut4 plays an important role in bone growth. Insulin and IGF-I actions on skeletal growth and glucose uptake were determined using mandibular condyle (MC) organ cultures and MC-derived primary cell cultures (MCDC). Chondrogenesis was determined by following proliferation and differentiation activities using immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis of proliferating cell nuclear antigen and type II collagen expression, respectively. Overall condylar growth was assessed morphometrically. GLUT4 mRNA and protein levels were determined using in situ hybridization and IHC, respectively. Glut4 translocation to the cell membrane was assessed using confocal microscopy analysis of GFP-Glut4 fusion-transfected cells and immunogold and electron microscopy on MC sections; glucose uptake was assayed by 2-deoxyglucose (2-DOG) uptake. Both IGF-I and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in MCDC, with IGF-I being tenfold more potent than insulin. Blockage of IGF-IR abrogated both IGF-I- and insulin-induced chondrogenesis and glucose metabolism. IGF-I, but not insulin, induced Glut4 translocation to the plasma membrane. Additionally, insulin induced both GLUT4 and IGF-IR gene expression and improved condylar growth in insulin receptor knockout mice-derived MC. Moreover, silencing of GLUT4 gene in MCDC culture abolished both IGF-I-induced glucose uptake and chondrocytic proliferation and differentiation. In growing bone, the IGF-IR pathway stimulates Glut4 translocation and enhances glucose uptake. Moreover, intact Glut4 cellular levels and translocation machinery are essential for early skeletal growth.  相似文献   

20.
Insulin and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) receptors are highly homologous tyrosine kinase receptors that share many common steps in their signaling pathways and have ligands that can bind to either receptor with differing affinities. To define precisely the signaling specific to the insulin receptor (IR) or the IGF-I receptor, we have generated brown preadipocyte cell lines that lack either receptor (insulin receptor knockout (IRKO) or insulin-like growth factor receptor knockout (IGFRKO)). Control preadipocytes expressed fewer insulin receptors than IGF-I receptors (20,000 versus 60,000), but during differentiation, insulin receptor levels increased so that mature adipocytes expressed slightly more insulin receptors than IGF-I receptors (120,000 versus 100,000). In these cells, insulin stimulated IR homodimer phosphorylation, whereas IGF-I activated both IGF-I receptor homodimers and hybrid receptors. Insulin-stimulated IRS-1 phosphorylation was significantly impaired in IRKO cells but was surprisingly elevated in IGFRKO cells. IRS-2 phosphorylation was unchanged in either cell line upon insulin stimulation. IGF-I-dependent phosphorylation of IRS-1 and IRS-2 was ablated in IGFRKO cells but not in IRKO cells. In control cells, both insulin and IGF-I produced a dose-dependent increase in phosphorylated Akt and MAPK, although IGF-I elicited a stronger response at an equivalent dose. In IRKO cells, the insulin-dependent increase in phospho-Akt was completely abolished at the lowest dose and reached only 20% of the control stimulation at 10 nm. Most interestingly, the response to IGF-I was also impaired at low doses, suggesting that IR is required for both insulin- and IGF-I-dependent phosphorylation of Akt. Most surprisingly, insulin- or IGF-I-dependent phosphorylation of MAPK was unaltered in either receptor-deficient cell line. Taken together, these results indicate that the insulin and IGF-I receptors contribute distinct signals to common downstream components in response to both insulin and IGF-I.  相似文献   

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