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1.
The current study was aimed to study the effect of curcumin on the expression levels of brain glucose transporter 1 protein (GLUT1) and femoral muscle glucose transporter 4 protein (GLUT4), in addition to study its possible therapeutic role in ameliorating insulin resistance and the metabolic disturbance in the obese and type 2 diabetic male albino Wistar rat model. Diabetes was induced by a high-fat (HF) diet with low dose streptozotocin (STZ). Curcumin was administered intragastrically for 8 weeks (80 mg/kg BW/day). The HF-diet group developed obesity, hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, reduced liver glycogen content with significant dyslipidemia. In the diabetic control group, hyperglycemia and insulin resistance high calculated homeostasis model assessment (HOMA-IR-index score) were pronounced, with reductions in liver and muscle glycogen contents, concomitant with dyslipidemia and significantly elevated malondialdehyde levels in liver and pancreas. GLUT1 and GLUT4 were down-regulated in the obese and the diabetic control groups, respectively. Curcumin, showed glucose-lowering effect and decreased insulin resistance, dyslipidemia and malondialdehyde levels in both tissues, it increased liver & muscle glycogen contents, compared to the diabetic control. Curcumin significantly up-regulated GLUT4 gene expression, compared to the diabetic control group. In conclusions, these results indicate a therapeutic role of curcumin in improving the diabetic status, obesity and enhancing the expression of GLUT4 gene.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated whether adenovirus-mediated preproinsulin gene transfer into insulin target tissues (adipocytes) ameliorates hyperglycemia in diabetic mice. KKA(y) mice, a genetically obese type 2 diabetic animal model, were treated with a single subcutaneous injection of recombinant adenovirus, Adex1CA-human preproinsulin (Adex1CA-pchi), into the epididymal fat pads. pchi mRNA was expressed only in adipose tissue in which mature insulin was produced. Three days after virus injection these mice showed a marked decrease of blood glucose levels (from about 400 to 200 mg/dl), and an intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test revealed the markedly improved glucose tolerance. There was no significant difference in serum insulin levels between control and recombinant adenovirus-treated KKA(y) mice. The normalized glucose levels in diabetic mice were maintained for at least 2 weeks after the virus injection. This strategy could provide a novel and, most importantly, a simple and convenient gene therapy for obese type 2 diabetes patients.  相似文献   

3.
According to the "glucose toxicity" hypothesis, hyperglycemia contributes to defective beta-cell function in type 2, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. This concept is supported by substantial data in rodent models of diabetes. However, the ability of glucose to stimulate the accumulation of insulin mRNA, a critical feature of normal beta-cell physiology, has not been investigated in in vivo models with chronic hyperglycemia. The aim of this study was to determine whether glucose-induced insulin mRNA accumulation is impaired in the neonatal streptozotocin-treated rat (n0-STZ rat), a model of non-obese, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Islets of Langerhans isolated from n0-STZ and control rats were cultured for 24 h in the presence of 2.8 or 16.7 mmol/l glucose, and insulin mRNA levels were measured by Northern analysis. Insulin mRNA levels were increased more than twofold by glucose in control islets. In contrast, no significant effect of glucose was found on insulin mRNA levels in n0-STZ islets. We conclude that insulin gene regulation by glucose is impaired in n0-STZ rat islets.  相似文献   

4.
Although aberrant miRNA signatures are associated with diabetes, yet, the status and role of altered miRNAs in the diabetic skeletal muscle is currently poorly understood. Here, we report that 41 miRNAs are altered in the diabetic gastrocnemius skeletal muscle and of these, miR-135a that is identified as a critical regulator of myogenesis, is significantly up-regulated. IRS2 is predicted as its potential putative target and its levels are down-regulated in the diabetic gastrocnemius skeletal muscle. In C2C12 cells, while miR-135a levels decreased during differentiation, IRS2 levels were up-regulated. miR-135a significantly reduced IRS2 protein levels and its 3′UTR luciferase reporter activity and these were blunted by the miR-135a inhibitor and mutation in the miR-135a binding site. Knock-down of endogenous miR-135a levels increased IRS2 at the mRNA and protein levels. miR-135a also attenuated insulin stimulated phosphorylation and activation of PI3Kp85α and Akt and glucose uptake. miR-135a levels were also found to be elevated in the human diabetic skeletal muscle. In-vivo silencing of miR-135a alleviated hyperglycemia, improved glucose tolerance and significantly restored the levels of IRS2 and p-Akt in the gastrocnemius skeletal muscle of db/db mice without any effect on their hepatic levels. These suggest that miR-135a targets IRS2 levels by binding to its 3′UTR and this interaction regulates skeletal muscle insulin signaling.  相似文献   

5.
Mor A  Aizman E  George J  Kloog Y 《PloS one》2011,6(6):e21712

Background

Reduced glucose uptake due to insulin resistance is a pivotal mechanism in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes. It is also associated with increased inflammation. Ras inhibition downregulates inflammation in various experimental models. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of Ras inhibition on insulin sensitivity and glucose uptake, as well as its influence on type 2 diabetes development.

Methods and Findings

The effect of Ras inhibition on glucose uptake was examined both in vitro and in vivo. Ras was inhibited in cells transfected with a dominant-negative form of Ras or by 5-fluoro-farnesylthiosalicylic acid (F-FTS), a small-molecule Ras inhibitor. The involvement of IκB and NF-κB in Ras-inhibited glucose uptake was investigated by immunoblotting. High fat (HF)-induced diabetic mice were treated with F-FTS to test the effect of Ras inhibition on induction of hyperglycemia. Each of the Ras-inhibitory modes resulted in increased glucose uptake, whether in insulin-resistant C2C12 myotubes in vitro or in HF-induced diabetic mice in vivo. Ras inhibition also caused increased IκB expression accompanied by decreased expression of NF-κB . In fat-induced diabetic mice treated daily with F-FTS, both the incidence of hyperglycemia and the levels of serum insulin were significantly decreased.

Conclusions

Inhibition of Ras apparently induces a state of heightened insulin sensitization both in vitro and in vivo. Ras inhibition should therefore be considered as an approach worth testing for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

6.
《遗传学报》2022,49(4):364-376
The soaring global prevalence of diabetes makes it urgent to explore new drugs with high efficacy and safety. Nanomaterial-derived bioactive agents are emerging as one of the most promising candidates for biomedical application. In the present study, we investigated the anti-diabetic effects of a functionalized gadofullerene (GF) using obese db/db and non-obese mouse model of type 2 diabete mellitus (MKR) mouse type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) models. In both mouse models, the diabetic phenotypes, including hyperglycemia, impaired glucose tolerance, and insulin sensitivity, were ameliorated after two or four weeks of intraperitoneal administration of GF. GF lowered blood glucose levels in a dose-dependent manner. Importantly, the restored blood glucose levels could persist ten days after withdrawal of GF treatment. The hepatic AKT/GSK3β/FoxO1 pathway is shown to be the main target of GF for rebalancing gluconeogenesis and glycogen synthesis in vivo and in vitro. Furthermore, GF treatment significantly reduced weight gain of db/db mice with reduced hepatic fat storage by the inhibition of de novo lipogenesis through mTOR/S6K/SREBP1 pathway. Our data provide compelling evidence to support the promising application of GF for the treatment of T2DM.  相似文献   

7.
This study examined the relationship between islet neurohormonal characteristics and the defective glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in genetic type 2 diabetic Chinese hamsters. Two different sublines were studied: diabetes-prone CHIG hamsters and control CHIA hamsters. The CHIG hamsters were divided into three subgroups, depending on severity of hyperglycemia. Compared to normoglycemic CHIG hamsters and control CHIA hamsters, severely hyperglycemic CHIG hamsters (glucose > 15 mmol/l) showed marked glucose intolerance during i.p. glucose tolerance test and 75% impairment of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from isolated islets. Mildly hyperglycemic CHIG animals (glucose 7.2-15 mmol/l) showed only moderate glucose intolerance and a 60% impairment of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from the islets. Immunostaining for neuropeptide Y and tyrosine hydroxylase (markers for adrenergic nerves) and for vasoactive intestinal peptide (marker for cholinergic nerves) revealed significant reduction in immunostaining of islets in the severely but not in the mildly hyperglycemic animals, compared to control CHIA hamsters. The study therefore provides evidence that in this model of type 2 diabetes in Chinese hamsters, severe hyperglycemia is accompanied not only by marked glucose intolerance and islet dysfunction but also by reduced islet innervation. This suggests that islet neuronal alterations may contribute to islet dysfunction in severe but not in mild diabetes.  相似文献   

8.
To investigate whether correction of fasting hyperglycemia per se improves the insulin secretion in type 2 diabetic subjects, plasma insulin response to 75 g oral glucose load has been studied after acute and chronic normalization of fasting plasma glucose levels in 7 overt type 2 diabetic subjects. For the acute normalization of elevated fasting plasma glucose levels, an artificial endocrine pancreas was employed. Although fasting plasma glucose concentrations were normalized before the oral glucose challenge, insulin response to oral glucose was not improved compared to those without normalization of fasting plasma glucose levels. After 1-3 month control of hyperglycemia, the insulin response to glucose in the subjects was significantly improved compared to those without treatments. Results indicate that chronic metabolic control is essential for the improvement of insulin response to glucose in type 2 diabetic subjects, and also suggest that the impaired insulin secretion in type 2 diabetes is not due to hyperglycemia per se, but due to the metabolic derangements which lead to chronic hyperglycemia.  相似文献   

9.
To understand the day-to-day pathophysiology of impaired muscle glycogen storage in type 2 diabetes, glycogen concentrations were measured before and after the consumption of sequential mixed meals (breakfast: 190.5 g carbohydrate, 41.0 g fat, 28.8 g protein, 1253 kcal; lunch: 203.3 g carbohydrate, 48.1 g fat, 44.0 g protein, 1497.5 kcal) by use of natural abundance (13)C magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Subjects with diet-controlled type 2 diabetes (n = 9) and age- and body mass index-matched nondiabetic controls (n = 9) were studied. Mean fasting gastrocnemius glycogen concentration was significantly lower in the diabetic group (57.1 +/- 3.6 vs. 68.9 +/- 4.1 mmol/l; P < 0.05). After the first meal, mean glycogen concentration in the control group rose significantly from basal (97.1 +/- 7.0 mmol/l at 240 min; P = 0.005). After the second meal, the high level of muscle glycogen concentration in the control group was maintained, with a further rise to 108.0 +/- 11.6 mmol/l by 480 min. In the diabetic group, the postprandial rise was markedly lower than that of the control group (65.9 +/- 5.2 mmol/l at 240 min, P < 0.005, and 70.8 +/- 6.7 mmol/l at 480 min, P = 0.01) despite considerably greater serum insulin levels (752.0 +/- 109.0 vs. 372.3 +/- 78.2 pmol/l at 300 min, P = 0.013). This was associated with a significantly greater postprandial hyperglycemia (10.8 +/- 1.3 vs. 5.3 +/- 0.2 mmol/l at 240 min, P < 0.005). Basal muscle glycogen concentration correlated inversely with fasting blood glucose (r = -0.55, P < 0.02) and fasting serum insulin (r = -0.57, P < 0.02). The increment in muscle glycogen correlated with initial increment in serum insulin only in the control group (r = 0.87, P < 0.002). This study quantitates for the first time the subnormal basal muscle glycogen concentration and the inadequate glycogen storage after meals in type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

10.
To develop a rat model of type 2 diabetic mellitus that simulated the common manifestation of the metabolic abnormalities and resembled the natural history of a certain type 2 diabetes in human population, male Sprague-Dawley rats (4 months old) were injected with low-dose (15 mg/kg) STZ after high fat diet (30% of calories as fat) for two months (L-STZ/2HF). The functional and histochemical changes in the pancreatic islets were examined. Insulin-glucose tolerance test, islet immunohistochemistry and other corresponding tests were performed and the data in L-STZ/2HF group were compared with that of other groups, such as the model of type 1 diabetes (given 50 mg/kg STZ) and the model of obesity (high fat diet). The body weight of rats in the group of rats given 15 mg/kg STZ after high fat diet for two months increased significantly more than that of rats in the group of rats given 50 mg/kg STZ (the model of type 1 diabetes) (595 +/- 33 g vs. 352 +/- 32 g, p<0.05). Fast blood glucose levels for L-STZ/2HF group were 16.92 +/- 1.68 mmol/l, versus 5.17 +/- 0.55 mmol/l in normal control and 5.59 +/- 0.61 mmol/l in rats given high fat diet only. Corresponding values for fast serum insulin were 0.66 +/- 0.15 ng/ml, 0.52 +/- 0.13 ng/ml, 0.29 +/- 0.11 ng/ml, respectively. Rats of type 2 diabetes (L-STZ/2HF) had elevated levels of triglyceride (TG, 3.82 +/- 0.88 mmol/l), and cholesterol(Ch, 2.38 +/- 0.55 mmol/l) compared with control (0.95 +/- 0.15 mmol/l and 1.31 +/- 0.3 mmol/l, respectively) (p<0.05). The islet morphology as examined by immunocytochemistry using insulin antibodies in the L-STZ/2HF group was affected and quantitative analysis showed the islet insulin content was higher than that of rats with type 1 diabetes (P<0.05). We concluded that the new rat model of type 2 diabetes established with conjunctive treatment of low dose of STZ and high fat diet was characterized by hyperglycemia and light impaired insulin secretion function accompanied by insulin resistance, which resembles the clinical manifestation of type 2 diabetes. Such a model, easily attainable and inexpensive, would help further elucidation of the underlying mechanisms of diabetes and its complications.  相似文献   

11.
According to the glucose toxicity hypothesis, hyperglycemia contributes to defective beta-cell function in type 2, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. This concept is supported by substantial data in rodent models of diabetes. However, the ability of glucose to stimulate the accumulation of insulin mRNA, a critical feature of normal beta-cell physiology, has not been investigated in in vivo models of chronic hyperglycemia. The aim of this study was to determine whether glucose-induced insulin mRNA accumulation is impaired in the neonatal streptozotocin-treated rat (n0-STZ rat), a model of non-obese, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Islets of Langerhans isolated from n0-STZ and control rats were cultured for 24 h in the presence of 2.8 or 16.7 mmol/L glucose, and insulin mRNA levels were measured by Northern analysis. Insulin mRNA levels were increased more than twofold by glucose in control islets. In contrast, no significant effect of glucose was found on insulin mRNA levels in n0-STZ islets. We conclude that insulin gene regulation by glucose is impaired in n0-STZ rat islets.  相似文献   

12.
Hypothesizing that UCP2 may influence insulin secretion by modifying the ATP/ADP ratio within pancreatic islets, we have investigated the expression of intraislet UCP2 gene in rats showing insulin oversecretion (non-diabetic Zucker fa/fa obese rats, glucose-infused Wistar rats) or insulin undersecretion (fasting and mildly diabetic rats). We found that in Zucker fa/fa obese rats, hyperinsulinemia (1222 ± 98 pmol/1 vs. 128 ± 22 pmol/1 in lean Zucker rats) was accompanied by a significant increase in UCP2 mRNA levels. In rat submitted to a 5 day infusion with glucose, hyperinsulinemia (1126 ± 101 pmol/l vs. 215 ± 25 pmol/1 in Wistar control rats), coincided with an enhanced intraislet UCP2 gene expression, whereas a 8h or a 2 day-infusion did not induce significant changes in UCP2 mRNA expression. In rats made hypoinsulinemic and mildly diabetic by the injection of a low dose of streptozotocin, and in 4-day-fasting rats (plasma insulin 28 ± 5 pmol/1) UCP2 gene expression was sharply decreased. A 3-day-fast was ineffective. The data show the existence of a time-dependent correlation between islet mRNA UCP2 and insulin that may be interpreted as an adaptative response to prolonged insulin excess.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Impaired fasting glucose (IFG) represents risk of development of diabetes (DM) and its complications. We investigated insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity in 403 IFG subjects divided into three levels of 2-hour postchallenge glucose (2-h PG) to clarify the factors responsible in the development of glucose intolerance in Japanese IFG. Nearly 60% of the subjects at annual medical check-up with FPG of 6.1-7.0 mmol/l at the first screening were diagnosed by 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) to have impaired glucose tolerance (IGT; FPG <7.0 mmol/l and 7.8 mmol/l <2-h PG <11.1 mmol/l) or DM (isolated postchallenge hyperglycemia (IPH); FPG <7.0 mmol/l and 11.1 mmol/l <2-h PG level). The primary factor in the decreased glucose tolerance was a decrease in early-phase insulin, with some contribution of increasing insulin resistance. In addition, IFG/IGT and IFG/IPH subjects showed a compensatory increase in basal insulin secretion sufficient to keep FPG levels within the non-diabetic range. IFG is composed of three different categories in basal, early-phase insulin secretion, and insulin sensitivity.  相似文献   

15.
Objective: Obese non-diabetic patients are characterized by an extra-hepatic insulin resistance. Whether obese patients also have decreased hepatic insulin sensitivity remains controversial. Research Methods and Procedures: To estimate their hepatic insulin sensitivity, we measured the rate of exogenous insulin infusion required to maintain mildly elevated glycemia in obese patients with type 2 diabetes, obese non-diabetic patients, and lean control subjects during constant infusions of somatostatin and physiological low-glucagon replacement infusions. To account for differences in insulin concentrations among the three groups of subjects, an additional protocol was also performed in healthy lean subjects with higher insulin infusion rates and exogenous dextrose infusion. Results: The insulin infusion rate required to maintain glycemia at 8.5 mM was increased 4-fold in obese patients with type 2 diabetes and 1.5-fold in obese non-diabetic patients. The net endogenous glucose production (measured with 6,6-2H2-glucose) and total glucose output (measured with 2-2H1-glucose) were ∼30% lower in the patients than in the lean subjects. Net endogenous glucose production and total glucose output were both markedly increased in both groups of obese patients compared with lean control subjects during hyperinsulinemia. Discussion: Our data indicate that both obese non-diabetic and obese type 2 diabetic patients have a blunted suppressive action of insulin on glucose production, indicating hepatic and renal insulin resistance.  相似文献   

16.
Despite the prevalence of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus, their underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Many secreted endocrine factors and the intertissue cross-talk they mediate are known to be dysregulated in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Here, we describe CTRP12, a novel adipokine with anti-diabetic actions. The mRNA and circulating levels of CTRP12 were decreased in a mouse model of obesity, but its expression in adipocytes was increased by the anti-diabetic drug rosiglitazone. A modest rise in circulating levels of CTRP12 by recombinant protein administration was sufficient to lower blood glucose in wild-type, leptin-deficient ob/ob, and diet-induced obese mice. A short term elevation of serum CTRP12 by adenovirus-mediated expression improved glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity, normalized hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia, and lowered postprandial insulin resistance in obese and diabetic mice. CTRP12 improves insulin sensitivity in part by enhancing insulin signaling in the liver and adipose tissue. Further, CTRP12 also acts in an insulin-independent manner; in cultured hepatocytes and adipocytes, CTRP12 directly activated the PI3K-Akt signaling pathway to suppress gluconeogenesis and promote glucose uptake, respectively. Collectively, these data establish CTRP12 as a novel metabolic regulator linking adipose tissue to whole body glucose homeostasis through insulin-dependent and independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

17.
The in vivo effects of gavage administration of the synthetic, functional biomimetic cation [Cr3O(O2CCH2CH3)6(H2O)3]+ to healthy and type 2 diabetic model rats are described. After 24 weeks of treatment (0–1,000 g Cr/kg body mass) of healthy Sprague Dawley rats, the cation results in a lowering (P<0.05) of fasting blood plasma low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, total cholesterol, triglycerides, and insulin levels and of 2-h plasma insulin and glucose concentrations after a glucose challenge. Zucker obese rats (a model of the early stages of type 2 diabetes) and Zucker diabetic fatty rats (a model for type 2 diabetes) after supplementation (1,000 g Cr/kg) have lower fasting plasma total, high-density lipoprotein, and LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, glycated hemoglobin, and insulin levels and lower 2-h plasma insulin levels in glucose tolerance tests. The lowering of plasma insulin concentrations with little effect on glucose concentrations suggests that the supplement increases insulin sensitivity. The cation after 12 and 22 or 24 weeks of administration lowers (P<0.05) fasting plasma glycated hemoglobin levels in the Zucker diabetic and Zucker obese rats, respectively, and thus can improve the glucose status of the diabetic models. The effects cannot be attributed to the propionate ligand.Supplementary material is available for this article at .An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

18.
Objective: Biliopancreatic diversion (BPD) restores normal glucose tolerance in a few weeks in morbid obese subjects with type 2 diabetes, improving insulin sensitivity. However, there is less known about the effects of BPD on insulin secretion. We tested the early effects of BPD on insulin secretion in obese subjects with and without type 2 diabetes. Methods and Procedures: Twenty‐one consecutive morbid obese subjects, 9 with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and 12 with normal fasting glucose (NFG) were evaluated, just before and 1 month after BPD, by measuring body weight (BW), glucose, adipocitokines, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA‐IR), acute insulin response (AIR) to e.v. glucose and the insulinogenic index adjusted for insulin resistance ([ΔI5/ΔG5]/HOMA‐IR). Results: Preoperatively, those with T2DM differed from those with NFG in showing higher levels of fasting glucose, reduced AIR (57.9 ± 29.5 vs. 644.9 ± 143.1 pmol/l, P < 0.01) and reduced adjusted insulinogenic index (1.0 ± 0.5 vs. 17.6 ± 3.9 1/mmol2, P < 0.001). One month following BPD, in both groups BW was reduced (by ~11%), but all subjects were still severely obese; HOMA‐IR and leptin decreased significanlty, while high‐molecular weight (HMW) adiponectin and adjusted insulinogenic index increased. In the T2DM group, fasting glucose returned to non‐diabetic values. AIR did not change in the NFG group, while in the T2DM group it showed a significant increase (from 58.0 ± 29.5 to 273.8 ± 47.2 pmol/l, P < 0.01). In the T2DM group, the AIR percentage variation from baseline was significantly related to changes in fasting glucose (r = 0.70, P = 0.02), suggesting an important relationship exists between impaired AIR and hyperglycaemia. Discussion: BPD is able to restore AIR in T2DM even just 1 month after surgery. AIR restoration is associated with normalization of fasting glucose concentrations.  相似文献   

19.
20.
In an experimental model of obesity and hyperglycemia in Drosophila melanogaster we studied the effect of diet modification and administration of metformin on systemic infection with Rhizopus, a common cause of mucormycosis in diabetic patients. Female Wt-type Drosophila flies were fed regular (RF) or high-fat diet (HFD; 30% coconut oil) food with or without metformin for 48 h and then injected with R. oryzae. Survival rates, glucose and triglyceride levels were compared between 1) normal-weight flies (RF), 2) obese flies (HFD), 3) obese flies fed with RF, 4) flies continuously on HFD + metformin, 5) flies fed on HFD + metformin, then transferred to RF, and 6) obese flies administered metformin after infection. Glucose levels were compared across groups of non-infected flies and across groups of infected flies. Survival was significantly decreased (P = 0.003) in obese flies, while post-infection glucose levels were significantly increased (P = 0.0001), compared to normal-weight flies. Diet and administration of metformin led to weight loss, normalized glucose levels during infection, and were associated with decreased mortality and tissue fungal burden. In conclusion, diet and metformin help control infection-associated hyperglycemia and improve survival in Drosophila flies with mucormycosis. Fly models of obesity bear intriguing similarities to the pathophysiology of insulin resistance and diabetes in humans, and can provide new insights into the pathogenesis and treatment of infections in obese and diabetic patients.  相似文献   

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