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ABSTRACT: Oxygen consumption reflects multiple processes in pancreatic islets including mechanisms contributing to insulin secretion, oxidative stress and viability, providing an important readout in studies of islet function, islet viability and drug testing. Due to the scarcity, heterogeneity, and intrinsic kinetic properties of individual islets, it would be of great benefit to detect oxygen consumption by single islets. We present a novel method we have developed to image oxygen in single islets.
Using a microfluidics system, individual islets and a fluorescent oxygen-sensitive dye were encased within a thin alginate polymer layer. Insulin secretion by the encapsulated islets was normal. Fluorescent signal from the encased dye, detected using a standard inverted fluorescence microscope and digital camera, was stable and proportional to the amount of oxygen in the media. When integrated into a perifusion system, the sensing system detected changes in response to metabolic substrates, mitochondrial poisons, and induced-oscillations. Glucose responses averaged 30.1±7.1% of the response to a metabolic inhibitor (cyanide), increases were observed in all cases (n = 6), and the system was able to resolve changes in oxygen consumption that had a period greater than 0.5 minutes. The sensing system operated similarly from 2-48 hours following encapsulation, and viability and function of the islets were not significantly affected by the encapsulation process.
An oxygen-dependent dye situated around and within a pancreatic islet encapsulated by a thin layer of alginate was sensitive to changes in oxygen consumption, and was not harmful to the function or viability of islets over the course of two days. The microcapsule-based sensing method is particularly suited to assessing the effects of compounds (dose responses and time courses) and chronic changes occurring over the course of days. The approach should be applicable to other cell types and dyes sensitive to other biologically important molecules.
PLoS ONE 01/2012; 7(3):e33070. · 4.09 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Although neurogenesis occurs in discrete areas of the adult mammalian brain, neural progenitor cells (NPCs) produce fewer
new neurons with age. To characterize the molecular changes that occur during aging, we performed a proteomic comparison between
primary-cultured NPCs from the young adult and aged mouse forebrain. This analysis yielded changes in proteins necessary for
cellular metabolism. Mitochondrial quantity and oxygen consumption rates decrease with aging, although mitochondrial DNA in
aged NPCs does not have increased mutation rates. In addition, aged cells are resistant to the mitochondrial inhibitor rotenone
and proliferate in response to lowered oxygen conditions. These results demonstrate that aging NPCs display an altered metabolic
phenotype, characterized by a coordinated shift in protein expression, subcellular structure, and metabolic physiology.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 11/2011; 286(44):38592-38601. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Although neurogenesis occurs in discrete areas of the adult mammalian brain, neural progenitor cells (NPCs) produce fewer new neurons with age. To characterize the molecular changes that occur during aging, we performed a proteomic comparison between primary-cultured NPCs from the young adult and aged mouse forebrain. This analysis yielded changes in proteins necessary for cellular metabolism. Mitochondrial quantity and oxygen consumption rates decrease with aging, although mitochondrial DNA in aged NPCs does not have increased mutation rates. In addition, aged cells are resistant to the mitochondrial inhibitor rotenone and proliferate in response to lowered oxygen conditions. These results demonstrate that aging NPCs display an altered metabolic phenotype, characterized by a coordinated shift in protein expression, subcellular structure, and metabolic physiology.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 09/2011; 286(44):38592-601. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Influx of calcium is an essential but insufficient signal in sustained nutrient-stimulated insulin secretion, and increased metabolic rate of the beta cell is also required. The aim of the study was to test the hypothesis that the reduced state of cytochrome c is a metabolic co-factor necessary for insulin secretion, over and above its participation in the ATP-generating function of electron transport/oxidative phosphorylation. We found that nutrient stimulation of insulin secretion by isolated rat islets was strongly correlated with reduced cytochrome c, and agents that acutely and specifically reduced cytochrome c led to increased insulin secretion, even in the face of decreased oxygen consumption and calcium influx. In contrast, neither sites 1 nor 4 of the electron transport chain were both necessary and essential for the stimulation of insulin secretion to occur. Importantly, stimulation of islets with glucose, α-ketoisocaproate, or glyceraldehyde resulted in the appearance of cytochrome c in the cytosol, suggesting a pathway for the regulation of exocytotic machinery by reduction of cytochrome c. The data suggest that the metabolic factor essential for sustained calcium-stimulated insulin secretion to occur is linked to reduction and translocation of cytochrome c.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 03/2011; 286(20):17422-34. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: BK channels are large unitary conductance K(+) channels cooperatively activated by intracellular calcium and membrane depolarisation. We show that BK channels regulate electrical activity in β-cells of mouse pancreatic islets exposed to elevated glucose. In 11.1 mM glucose, the non-peptidyl BK channel blocker paxilline increased the height of β-cell action potentials (APs) by 21 mV without affecting burst- or silent-period durations. In isolated β-cells, paxilline increased AP height by 16 mV without affecting resting membrane potential. In voltage clamp, paxilline blocked a transient component of outward current activated by a short depolarisation, which accounted for at least 90% of the initial outward K(+) current. This BK current (I(BK)) was blocked by the Ca(2+) channel blockers Cd(2+) (200 μM) or nimodipine (1 μM), and potentiated by FPL-64176 (1 μM). I(BK) was also 56% blocked by the BK channel blocker iberiotoxin (100 nM). I(BK) activated more than 10-fold faster than the delayed rectifier I(Kv) over the physiological voltage range, and partially inactivated. An AP-like command revealed that I(BK) activated and deactivated faster than I(Kv) and accounted for 86% of peak I(K), explaining why I(BK) block increased AP height. A higher amplitude AP-like command, patterned on an AP recorded in 11.1 mM glucose plus paxilline, activated 4-fold more I(Kv) and significantly increased Ca(2+) entry. Paxilline increased insulin secretion in islets exposed to 11.1 mM glucose by 67%, but did not affect basal secretion in 2.8 mM glucose. These data suggest a modified model of β-cell AP generation where I(BK) and I(Kv) coordinate the AP repolarisation.
The Journal of Physiology 09/2010; 588(Pt 18):3511-23. · 4.72 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A unique property of lymphocytes among all body tissues is their capacity for rapid proliferation in the context of responding to infectious challenges. Lymphocyte proliferation involves a transition from a quiescent metabolic state adjusted to maintain cellular energy homeostasis, to a proliferative metabolic state in which aerobic glycolysis is used to generate energy and biosynthetic precursors necessary for the accumulation of cell mass. Here we show that modulation of TRPM7 channel function in tumor B-lymphocytes directly induces quiescent/proliferative metabolic transitions. As TRPM7 is widely expressed outside of the immune system, our results suggest that TRPM7 may play an active role in regulating metabolic transitions associated with rapid cellular proliferation and malignancy.
Cell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.) 09/2010; 9(17):3565-74. · 5.36 Impact Factor
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Jonathan D Linton,
Lars C Holzhausen,
Norbert Babai,
Hongman Song,
Kiyoharu J Miyagishima,
George W Stearns,
Ken Lindsay,
Junhua Wei,
Andrei O Chertov,
Theo A Peters, [......],
Roxana A Radu,
Gabriel H Travis,
Willam N Zagotta,
Ellen Townes-Anderson,
Ed Parker,
Catharina E E M Van der Zee,
Alapakkam P Sampath,
Maxim Sokolov,
Wallace B Thoreson,
James B Hurley
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ABSTRACT: Structural features of neurons create challenges for effective production and distribution of essential metabolic energy. We investigated how metabolic energy is distributed between cellular compartments in photoreceptors. In avascular retinas, aerobic production of energy occurs only in mitochondria that are located centrally within the photoreceptor. Our findings indicate that metabolic energy flows from these central mitochondria as phosphocreatine toward the photoreceptor's synaptic terminal in darkness. In light, it flows in the opposite direction as ATP toward the outer segment. Consistent with this model, inhibition of creatine kinase in avascular retinas blocks synaptic transmission without influencing outer segment activity. Our findings also reveal how vascularization of neuronal tissue can influence the strategies neurons use for energy management. In vascularized retinas, mitochondria in the synaptic terminals of photoreceptors make neurotransmission less dependent on creatine kinase. Thus, vasculature of the tissue and the intracellular distribution of mitochondria can play key roles in setting the strategy for energy distribution in neurons.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 05/2010; 107(19):8599-604. · 9.68 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Calcium (Ca(2+)) influx is required for the sustained secretion of insulin and is accompanied by a large rate of energy usage. We hypothesize that the energy usage reflects a process [Ca(2+)/metabolic coupling process (CMCP)] that couples Ca(2+) to insulin secretion by pancreatic islets. The aim of the study was to test this hypothesis by testing the effect of inhibiting candidate Ca(2+)-sensitive proteins proposed to play a critical role in the CMCP. The effects of the inhibitors on oxygen consumption rate (OCR), a reflection of ATP usage, and insulin secretion rate (ISR) were compared with those seen when L-type Ca(2+) channels were blocked with nimodipine. We reasoned that if a downstream Ca(2+)-regulated site was responsible for the OCR associated with the CMCP, then its inhibition should mimic the effect of nimodipine. Consistent with previous findings, nimodipine decreased glucose-stimulated OCR by 36% and cytosolic Ca(2+) by 46% and completely suppressed ISR in rat pancreatic islets. Inhibitors of three calmodulin-sensitive proteins (myosin light-chain kinase, calcineurin, and Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II) did not meet the criteria. In contrast, KN-62 severed the connection between Ca(2+) influx, OCR, and ISR without interfering with Ca(2+) influx. In the presence of nimodipine or KN-62, potentiators of ISR, acetylcholine, GLP-1, and arginine had little effect on insulin secretion, suggesting that the CMCP is also essential for the amplification of ISR. In conclusion, a KN-62-sensitive process directly mediates the effects of Ca(2+) influx via L-type Ca(2+) channels on OCR and ISR, supporting the essential role of the CMCP in mediating ISR.
AJP Endocrinology and Metabolism 08/2009; 297(3):E717-27. · 4.75 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We investigated whether NADPH oxidase-dependent production of superoxide contributes to activation of NF-kappaB in endothelial cells by the saturated free fatty acid palmitate.
After incubation of human endothelial cells with palmitate at a concentration known to induce cellular inflammation (100 mumol/L), we measured superoxide levels by using electron spin resonance spectroscopy and the spin trap 1-hydroxy-3-methoxycarbonyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidine (CMH). Palmitate exposure induced a >2-fold increase in superoxide levels, an effect associated with activation of NF-kappaB signaling as measured by phospho-IkappaBalpha, NF-kappaB activity, IL-6, and ICAM expression. Reduction in superoxide levels by each of 3 different interventions-pretreatment with superoxide dismutase (SOD), diphenylene iodinium (DPI), or knockdown of NADPH oxidase 4 (NOX4) by siRNA-attenuated palmitate-mediated NF-kappaB signaling. Inhibition of toll like receptor-4 (TLR4) signaling also suppressed palmitate-mediated superoxide production and associated inflammation, whereas palmitate-mediated superoxide production was not affected by overexpression of a phosphorylation mutant IkappaBalpha (NF-kappaB super repressor) that blocks cellular inflammation downstream of IKKbeta/NF-kappaB. Finally, high-fat feeding increased expression of NOX4 and an upstream activator, bone morphogenic protein (BMP4), in thoracic aortic tissue from C57BL/6 mice, but not in TLR4(-/-) mice, compared to low-fat fed controls.
These results suggest that NADPH oxidase-dependent superoxide production links palmitate-stimulated TLR4 activation to NF-kappaB signaling in endothelial cells.
Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology 06/2009; 29(9):1370-5. · 6.37 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Commensal flora and pathogenic microbes influence the incidence of diabetes in animal models yet little is known about the mechanistic basis of these interactions. We hypothesized that Myd88, an adaptor molecule in the Toll-like-receptor (TLR) pathway, regulates pancreatic beta-cell function and homeostasis. We first examined beta-cells histologically and found that Myd88-/- mice have smaller islets in comparison to C57Bl/6 controls. Myd88-/- mice were nonetheless normoglycemic both at rest and after an intra-peritoneal glucose tolerance test (IPGTT). In contrast, after low-dose streptozotocin (STZ) challenge, Myd88-/-mice had an abnormal IPGTT relative to WT controls. Furthermore, Myd88-/- mice suffer enhanced beta-cell apoptosis and have enhanced hepatic damage with delayed recovery upon low-dose STZ treatment. Finally, we treated WT mice with broad-spectrum oral antibiotics to deplete their commensal flora. In WT mice, low dose oral lipopolysaccharide, but not lipotichoic acid or antibiotics alone, strongly promoted enhanced glycemic control. These data suggest that Myd88 signaling and certain TLR ligands mediate a homeostatic effect on beta-cells primarily in the setting of injury.
PLoS ONE 02/2009; 4(4):e5063. · 4.09 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2DM) is increasing, creating a need for T2DM animal models for the study of disease pathogenesis, prevention, and treatment. The purpose of this project was to develop a rat model of T2DM that more closely models the pathophysiology of T2DM in humans. The model was created by crossing obese Sprague-Dawley rats with insulin resistance resulting from polygenic adult-onset obesity with Zucker diabetic fatty-lean rats that have a defect in pancreatic beta-cell function but normal leptin signaling. We have characterized the model with respect to diabetes incidence; age of onset; longitudinal measurements of glucose, insulin, and lipids; and glucose tolerance. Longitudinal fasting glucose and insulin data demonstrated progressive hyperglycemia (with fasting and fed glucose concentrations >250 and >450 mg/dl, respectively) after onset along with hyperinsulinemia resulting from insulin resistance at onset followed by a progressive decline in circulating insulin concentrations, indicative of beta-cell decompensation. The incidence of diabetes in male and female rats was 92 and 43%, respectively, with an average age of onset of 6 mo in males and 9.5 mo in females. Results from intravenous glucose tolerance tests, pancreas immunohistochemistry, and islet insulin content further support a role for beta-cell dysfunction in the pathophysiology of T2DM in this model. Diabetic animals also exhibit glycosuria, polyuria, and hyperphagia. Thus diabetes in the UC Davis-T2DM rat is more similar to clinical T2DM in humans than in other existing rat models and provides a useful model for future studies of the pathophysiology, treatment, and prevention of T2DM.
AJP Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology 10/2008; 295(6):R1782-93. · 3.34 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The aim of the study was to test whether the source of intracellular calcium (Ca2+) is a determinant of beta cell function. We hypothesized that elevations in cytosolic Ca2+ caused by the release of Ca2+ from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) have little physiologic impact on oxygen consumption and insulin secretion. Ca2+ release from the ER was induced in isolated rat islets by acetylcholine and response of oxygen consumption rate (OCR), NAD(P)H, cytosolic Ca2+, and insulin secretory rate (ISR) were measured. Glucose increased all four parameters, and thereafter acetylcholine further increased cytosolic Ca2+, OCR, and ISR. To assess the contribution of Ca2+ release from the ER in mediating the effects of acetylcholine, ER Ca2+ stores were first emptied by inhibiting the sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase, which subsequently reduced the effect of acetylcholine on cytosolic Ca2+ but not its effects on OCR or ISR. As predicted, OCR and ISR were acutely sensitive to changes in L-type Ca2+ channel activity; nimodipine completely inhibited glucose-stimulated ISR and suppressed OCR by 36%, despite only inhibiting cytosolic Ca2+ by 46%. Moreover, in the presence of nimodipine and high glucose, acetylcholine still elevated cytosolic Ca2+ levels above those observed in the presence of high glucose alone but did not significantly stimulate ISR. In conclusion, Ca2+ flux through L-type Ca2+ channels was tightly coupled to changes in OCR and ISR. In contrast, the results obtained support the notion that Ca2+ release from the ER has little or no access to the intracellular machinery that regulates OCR and ISR.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 08/2008; 283(36):24334-42. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Immunoprotection of islets using bioisolator systems permits introduction of allogeneic cells to diabetic patients without the need for immunosuppression. Using TheraCyte immunoisolation devices, we investigated two rat models of type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), BB rats and rats made diabetic by streptozotocin (STZ) treatment. We chose to implant islets after the onset of diabetes to mimic the probable treatment of children with T1DM as they are usually diagnosed after disease onset. We encapsulated 1000 rat islets and implanted them subcutaneously (SQ) into diabetic biobreeding (BB) rats and STZ-induced diabetic rats, defined as two or more consecutive days of blood glucose>350 mg/dl. Rats were monitored for weight and blood glucose. Untreated BB rats rapidly lost weight and were euthanized at >20% weight loss that occurred between 4 and 10 days from implantation. For period of 30-40 days following islet implantation weights of treated rats remained steady or increased. Rapid weight loss occurred after surgical removal of devices that contained insulin positive islets. STZ-treated rats that received encapsulated islets showed steady weight gain for up to 130 days, whereas untreated control rats showed steady weight loss that achieved >20% at around 55 days. Although islet implants did not normalize blood glucose, treated rats were apparently healthy and groomed normally. Autologous or allogeneic islets were equally effective in providing treatment. TheraCyte devices can sustain islets, protect allogeneic cells from immune attack and provide treatment for diabetic-mediated weight loss in both BB rats and STZ-induced diabetic rats.
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine 04/2008; 12(6B):2644-50. · 4.13 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Overexpression of Bcl-x(L) in multiple cancers correlates with resistance to chemotherapy and radiation therapy, and provides a rationale for development of small-molecule Bcl-x(L) inhibitors. Based on knockout studies, nonneoplastic cells also require Bcl-x(L) survival functions, particularly when challenged with cytotoxic agents. We analyze the selective cytotoxicity of one Bcl-x(L) inhibitor, 2-methoxy antimycin A, toward cells with excess exogenous Bcl-x(L) in isogenic cell line pairs. This selectivity, characteristic of a gain-of-function mechanism, is not shared by other known Bcl-x(L) inhibitors, including BH3I-2, HA14-1, ABT-737, gossypol, or the stapled BH3 helical peptide SAHB-BID. We show that Bcl-x(L) overexpression induces a shift in energy metabolism from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis. Treatment with 2-methoxy antimycin A acutely reverses the metabolic effects of Bcl-x(L), causing mitochondrial hyperpolarization and a progressive increase in mitochondrial NAD(P)H. We identify an additional small-molecule Bcl-x(L) inhibitor, NSC 310343, establishing a class of Bcl-x(L) inhibitors with gain-of-function activity. In contrast to other Bcl-x(L) inhibitors, combining gain-of-function Bcl-x(L) inhibitors with a standard inducer of apoptosis, staurosporine, enhances selective cytotoxicity toward Bcl-x(L)-overexpressing cells. These results provide an example of the intersection of bioenergetic metabolism and Bcl-x(L) functions and suggest a metabolic basis for the gain-of-function mechanism of Bcl-x(L) inhibitors.
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics 08/2007; 6(7):2073-80. · 5.23 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In brain, muscle, and pancreatic islets, depolarization induces an increase in respiration, which is dependent on calcium influx. The goal of this study was to assess the quantitative significance of this effect in islets relative to glucose-stimulated ATP turnover, to examine the molecular mechanism mediating the changes, and to investigate the functional implications with respect to insulin secretion. Glucose (3-20 mmol/l) increased steady-state levels of cytochrome c reduction (32-66%) in isolated rat islets, reflecting an increased production of NADH, and oxygen consumption rate (OCR) by 0.32 nmol/min/100 islets. Glucose-stimulated OCR was inhibited 30% by inhibitors of calcium influx (diazoxide or nimodipine), whereas a protein synthesis inhibitor (emetine) decreased it by only 24%. None of the inhibitors affected cytochrome c reduction, suggesting that calcium's effect on steady-state OCR is mediated by changes in ATP usage rather than the rate of NADH generation. 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine increased insulin secretion but had little effect on OCR, indicating that the processes of movement and exocytosis of secretory granules do not significantly contribute to ATP turnover. At 20 mmol/l glucose, a blocker of sarcoendoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) had little effect on OCR despite a large increase in cytosolic calcium, further supporting the notion that influx of calcium, not bulk cytosolic calcium, is associated with the increase in ATP turnover. The glucose dose response of calcium influx-dependent OCR showed a remarkable correlation with insulin secretion, suggesting that the process mediating the effect of calcium on ATP turnover has a role in the amplification pathway of insulin secretion.
Diabetes 01/2007; 55(12):3509-19. · 8.29 Impact Factor
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Patrick Weydt,
Victor V Pineda,
Anne E Torrence,
Randell T Libby,
Terrence F Satterfield,
Eduardo R Lazarowski,
Merle L Gilbert,
Gregory J Morton,
Theodor K Bammler,
Andrew D Strand,
Libin Cui,
Richard P Beyer,
Courtney N Easley,
Annette C Smith,
Dimitri Krainc,
Serge Luquet, Ian R Sweet,
Michael W Schwartz,
Albert R La Spada
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ABSTRACT: Huntington's disease (HD) is a fatal, dominantly inherited disorder caused by polyglutamine repeat expansion in the huntingtin (htt) gene. Here, we observe that HD mice develop hypothermia associated with impaired activation of brown adipose tissue (BAT). Although sympathetic stimulation of PPARgamma coactivator 1alpha (PGC-1alpha) was intact in BAT of HD mice, uncoupling protein 1 (UCP-1) induction was blunted. In cultured cells, expression of mutant htt suppressed UCP-1 promoter activity; this was reversed by PGC-1alpha expression. HD mice showed reduced food intake and increased energy expenditure, with dysfunctional BAT mitochondria. PGC-1alpha is a known regulator of mitochondrial function; here, we document reduced expression of PGC-1alpha target genes in HD patient and mouse striatum. Mitochondria of HD mouse brain show reduced oxygen consumption rates. Finally, HD striatal neurons expressing exogenous PGC-1alpha were resistant to 3-nitropropionic acid treatment. Altered PGC-1alpha function may thus link transcription dysregulation and mitochondrial dysfunction in HD.
Cell Metabolism 12/2006; 4(5):349-62. · 13.67 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Islets in most species respond to increased glucose with biphasic insulin secretion, marked by a sharp first-phase peak and a slowly rising second phase. Mouse islets in vitro, however, lack a robust second phase. To date, this observation has not been extended in vivo. We thus compared insulin secretion from conscious mice with isolated mouse islets in vitro. The arterial plasma insulin response to a hyperglycemic clamp was measured in conscious mice 1 wk after surgical implantation of carotid artery and jugular vein catheters. Mice were transfused using clamps with blood from a donor mouse to maintain blood volume, allowing frequent arterial sampling. When plasma glucose in vivo was raised from approximately 5 to approximately 13 mM, insulin rose to a first-phase peak of 403+/-73% above basal secretion (n=5), followed by a rising second phase of mean 289+/- 41%. In contrast, perifused mouse islets ( approximately 75 islets/trial) responded with a similar first phase of 508+/- 94% (n=4) but a smaller and virtually flat second phase of 169+/- 9% (n=4, P<0.05). Furthermore, the slope of the second-phase response differed significantly from zero in mice (2.63+/-0.39%/min, P<0.01), in contrast to perifused islets (0.18+/- 0.14%/min, P>0.30). Mice also displayed pulsatile patterns in insulin concentration (period: 4.2+/- 0.4 min, n=8). Conscious mice thus responded to increased glucose with biphasic and pulsatile insulin secretion, as in other species. The robust second phase observed in vivo suggests that the processes needed to generate second-phase insulin secretion may be abrogated by islet isolation.
AJP Endocrinology and Metabolism 04/2006; 290(3):E523-9. · 4.75 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Using the cre-loxP recombination system, we generated a line of mice expressing a constitutively active catalytic subunit of Protein Kinase A (PKA) in a temporally and spatially regulated fashion. In the absence of cre recombinase the modified catalytic subunit allele is functionally silent, but after recombination the mutant allele is expressed, resulting in enhanced PKA effects at basal cAMP levels. Mice expressing the modified protein in hepatocytes using albumin-cre transgenics show defects in glucose homeostasis, glycogen storage, fructose 2,6-bisphosphate levels, and induction of glucokinase mRNA during feeding. Similar to animals lacking glucokinase in the liver (Postic et al.: J Biol Chem 274:305-315, 1999), these mice also have defects in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, a hallmark of Type II diabetes. The widespread expression of PKA and the involvement of this kinase in a myriad of signaling pathways suggest that these animals will provide critical tools for the study of PKA function in vivo.
genesis 12/2005; 43(3):109-19. · 2.53 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: An in vitro method to assess human islets could prevent transplantation of nonviable islets and facilitate the optimization of islet preparation. We hypothesize that glucose-stimulated cytochrome c reduction and oxygen consumption by human islets can be used as predictors of transplant success.
Isolated human islets were obtained from research-grade pancreata. Using a previously developed islet flow culture system, the response of cytochrome c reduction and oxygen consumption to glucose was compared to the ability of islets transplanted into nondiabetic NOD-SCID mice to secrete C-peptide in response to a glucose tolerance test conducted 7 days following transplant (n=10).
In vitro responses by human islets were qualitatively similar to those seen in rat islets: glucose increased both oxygen consumption and cytochrome c reduction. However, the responses were smaller in magnitude and quite variable. Scatter plots of C-peptide and quantiles for ln(C-peptide) indicated that 12 ng/ml could be used as threshold of transplant success with which to evaluate the diagnostic potential of cytochrome c and oxygen consumption. Data was analyzed by generating receiver operating curves and the area under the curve was 0.889 (95% CI: 0.645-1.000) and 0.738 (95% CI: 0.413-1.000) for cytochrome c reduction and oxygen consumption respectively (1 indicates absolute predictive capability and 0.5 indicates no predictive capability).
The detection of glucose-stimulated cytochrome c reduction and oxygen consumption may have utility as criteria for the assessment of human islet quality.
Transplantation 11/2005; 80(8):1003-11. · 4.00 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Currently there are major efforts to develop strategies for the in vivo imaging of pancreatic beta cell mass as a clinical and investigational tool for detecting and tracking the loss of beta cells that underlies the progression of Type I diabetes. However, beta cells constitute only about 1% of pancreatic mass and are distributed throughout the pancreas within tiny islets of Langerhans that are each less than the spatial resolution of non-invasive imaging technologies.
To estimate the requisite binding characteristics of a candidate beta cell imaging agent, calculations of the beta cell contribution to a positron emission tomography signal were made using simple equations. These were based on the relative population of beta cells and non-beta cells within the pancreas and surrounding tissue and an equation describing equilibrium ligand binding.
The calculations show that two criteria must be met: (1) The low-volume fraction of beta cells within the exocrine pancreas (about 1:100) requires that beta cells retain labeled imaging agents at least 1,000-fold more strongly than exocrine cells. (2) Agents that label cell surface receptors, even if beta cell-specific, must do so at a high enough level so that the imaging signal arising from unbound label retained in extracellular spaces must not overwhelm signals from labeled beta cells.
The limits developed here can serve as criteria for identifying candidate imaging agents for the in vivo imaging of beta cell mass, thereby avoiding expensive preclinical development using compounds that have no chance of success.
Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics 11/2004; 6(5):652-9. · 1.93 Impact Factor