Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (focal adhesion kinase)
44,029 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the present study we have examined the proteins involved in the insulin signaling cascade during and after differentiation of human adipocyte precursor cells and their correlation with glucose uptake. The differentiation of human adipocytes was characterized by a two- to threefold stimulation of glucose transport in response to insulin and a marked increase protein expression for the insulin receptor, IRS-1, GLUT-4, PI 3-kinase, and PKB, with respect to undifferentiated cells. In contrast, there were small changes in the protein expression of IRS-2, and no changes in PKC zeta and MAP kinases, although basal MAP kinase activity and GLUT-1 protein were reduced during differentiation. In conclusion, there are quantitative differences in the regulation of IRS-1 and other proteins during differentiation which may contribute to more efficient insulin signaling leading to glucose uptake in mature fat cells. Alterations in this pattern may reflect or contribute to an insulin-resistant state.
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PMID:Regulation of proteins involved in insulin signaling pathways in differentiating human adipocytes. 1100

Recent studies suggest that the serine/threonine kinase protein kinase B (PKB or Akt) is involved in the pathway for insulin-stimulated glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4) translocation and glucose uptake. In this study we examined the components of the Akt signaling pathway in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue in vivo from C57BL/KsJ-Lepr(db/db) mice (db/db), a model of obesity, insulin resistance, and type II diabetes. There were no changes in the protein levels of GLUT4, p85alpha, or Akt in tissues from db/db mice compared with non-diabetic littermate controls (+/+). In response to acute insulin administration, GLUT4 recruitment to the plasma membrane increased twofold in muscle and adipose tissue from +/+ mice, but was significantly reduced by 42-43% (P<0.05) in both tissues from db/db mice. Insulin increased Akt-Ser(473) phosphorylation by two- to fivefold in muscle and adipose tissue from all mice. However, in db/db mice, maximal Akt-Ser(473) phosphorylation was decreased by 32% (P<0.05) and 69% (P<0.05) in muscle and adipose tissue respectively. This decreased phosphorylation in db/db mice corresponded with a significant decrease in maximal Akt kinase activity using a glycogen synthase kinase-3 fusion protein as a substrate (P<0.05). The level of insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of p85alpha from phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI 3)-kinase, which is upstream of Akt, was also reduced in muscle and adipose tissue from db/db mice (P<0.05); however, there was no change in extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1 or -2 phosphorylation. These data implicate decreased insulin-stimulated Akt kinase activity as an important component underlying impaired GLUT4 translocation and insulin resistance in tissues from db/db mice. However, impaired insulin signal transduction appears to be specific for the PI 3-kinase pathway of insulin signaling, while the MAP kinase pathway remained intact.
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PMID:Decreased Akt kinase activity and insulin resistance in C57BL/KsJ-Leprdb/db mice. 1101 58

The effect of insulin on glycogen synthesis and key enzymes of glycogen metabolism, glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthase, was studied in HepG2 cells. Insulin stimulated glycogen synthesis 1.83-3.30 fold depending on insulin concentration in the medium. Insulin caused a maximum of 65% decrease in glycogen phosphorylase 'a' and 110% increase in glycogen synthase activities in 5 min. Although significant changes in enzyme activities were observed with as low as 0.5 nM insulin level, the maximum effects were observed with 100 nM insulin. There was a significant inverse correlation between activities of glycogen phosphorylase 'a' and glycogen synthase 'a' (R2= 0.66, p < 0.001). Addition of 30 mM glucose caused a decrease in phosphorylase 'a' activity in the absence of insulin and this effect was additive with insulin up to 10 nM concentration. The inactivation of phosphorylase 'a' by insulin was prevented by wortmannin and rapamycin but not by PD98059. The activation of glycogen synthase by insulin was prevented by wortmannin but not by PD98059 or rapamycin. In fact, PD98059 slightly stimulated glycogen synthase activation by insulin. Under these experimental conditions, insulin decreased glycogen synthase kinase-3beta activity by 30-50% and activated more than 4-fold particulate protein phosphatase- activity and 1.9-fold protein kinase B activity; changes in all of these enzyme activities were abolished by wortmannin. The inactivation of GSK-3beta and activation of PKB by insulin were associated with their phosphorylation and this was also reversed by wortmannin. The addition of protein phosphatase-1 inhibitors, okadaic acid and calyculin A, completely abolished the effects of insulin on both enzymes. These data suggest that stimulation of glycogen synthase by insulin in HepG2 cells is mediated through the PI-3 kinase pathway by activating PKB and PP-1G and inactivating GSK-3beta. On the other hand, inactivation of phosphorylase by insulin is mediated through the PI-3 kinase pathway involving a rapamycin-sensitive p70(s6k) and PP-1G. These experiments demonstrate that insulin regulates glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthase through (i) a common signaling pathway at least up to PI-3 kinase and bifurcates downstream and (ii) that PP-1 activity is essential for the effect of insulin.
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PMID:Reciprocal regulation of glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthase by insulin involving phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase and protein phosphatase-1 in HepG2 cells. 1105 55

Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) exerts a negative feedback effect on GH secretion via either direct actions at the pituitary level or indirect ones at the hypothalamic level, through stimulation of somatostatin (SS) and/or inhibition of GHRH release. In fact, recombinant human IGF-I (rhIGF-I) in humans inhibits spontaneous GH secretion as well as the GH response to GHRH and even more to GH/GH-releasing peptides, whose main action is on the hypothalamus, antagonizing SS and enhancing GHRH activity. The aim of the present study was to further clarify in humans the mechanisms underlying IGF-I-induced inhibition of somatotroph secretion. In six normal young volunteers (all women; mean +/- SEM: age, 28.3+/-1.2 yr; body mass index, 21.3+/-1.2 kg/m2) we studied the GH response to GHRH (1 microg/kg, iv, at 0 min), both alone and combined with arginine (ARG; 0.5 g/kg, iv, from 0-30 min), which probably acts via inhibition of hypothalamic SS release, after pretreatment with rhIGF-I (20 microg/kg, sc, at -180 min) or placebo. rhIGF-I increased circulating IGF-I levels (peak at -60 vs. -180 min: 54.9+/-3.9 vs. 35.9+/-3.3 mmol/L; P < 0.05) to a reproducible extent, and these levels remained stable and within the normal range until 90 min. The mean GH concentration over 3 h (from -180 to 0 min) before ARG and/or GHRH was not modified by placebo or rhIGF-I. After placebo, the GH response to GHRH (peak, 23.6+/-2.9 microg/L) was strikingly enhanced (P < 0.05) by ARG coadministration (69.6+/-9.9 microg/L). rhIGF-I blunted the GH response to GHRH (13.1+/-4.5 microg/L; P < 0.05), whereas that to GHRH plus ARG was not modified (59.5+/-8.9 microg/L), although it occurred with some delay. Mean glucose and insulin concentrations were not modified by either placebo or rhIGF-I. In conclusion, ARG counteracts the inhibitory effect of rhIGF-I on somatotroph responsiveness to GHRH in humans. These findings suggest that the acute inhibitory effect of rhIGF-I on the GH response to GHRH takes place on the hypothalamus, possibly via enhancement of SS release, and that ARG overrides this action.
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PMID:Arginine counteracts the inhibitory effect of recombinant human insulin-like growth factor I on the somatotroph responsiveness to growth hormone-releasing hormone in humans. 1106 9

We hypothesized that the tolerance for nutrient deprivation as well as angiogenesis might be an important factor for tumor progression under hypovascular conditions. When normal human fibroblasts were subjected to extreme nutrient starvation by culturing in a medium without serum, glucose, and amino acids, cells died within 24 h. When substituted with liver cancer cell lines HepG2, Hep3B, HLE, and HuH-7, cell death occurred within 36 h. In contrast, four of six pancreas cancer cell lines, PANC-1, AsPC-1, BxPC-1, and KP-3, survived for remarkably longer periods; >50% of the cells survived, even after starvation for 48 h. Among three gastric cancer cell lines, MKN28, MKN45, and MKN74, only the most poorly differentiated MKN45 cells survived >36 h. More than 50% of the cells in colon cancer cell lines SW480, WiDr, and DLD-1 survived after 36 h, and the most undifferentiated SW480 cell line survived longest. We examined the possible involvement of PKB/Akt expression in the survival of various cell lines under nutrient starvation conditions. High expression of PKB/Akt was found to be associated with tolerance for nutrient starvation. When Akt antisense RNA expression vectors were introduced into PANC-1 cells, the tolerance was partially but significantly diminished by vectors for Akt1 and Akt2 but not Akt3. Because elimination of the tolerance might serve as a new strategy for cancer therapy, several compounds were tested for this purpose, and troglitazone, an insulin sensitizer, as well as LY294002, a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor, were found to kill PANC-1 cells only under nutrient starvation conditions.
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PMID:Remarkable tolerance of tumor cells to nutrient deprivation: possible new biochemical target for cancer therapy. 1108 46

Mammalian adipose tissue serves a number of functions, including storage of nutrients for periods of fasting and control of organismal metabolism. Critical to these functions is the capacity of the fat cell to respond to insulin with a significant increase in glucose uptake. It is now generally recognized that the major site of action of insulin in this tissue is the mobilization of a pool of latent, intracellular transport proteins. Nonetheless, the precise signaling pathways which mediate the insulin-stimulated increase in glucose transport remain uncertain. In recent years, the serine/threonine protein kinase Akt/PKB has emerged as an important candidate signaling molecule. Considerable current effort is being directed at trying to definitively establish whether Akt/PKB is an important intermediate in insulin signaling to glucose transport in muscle and fat.
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PMID:Insulin signaling in the adipocyte. 1112 46

Reduction of the glucose concentration in the culture medium of 3T3-L1 adipose cells below 1.25 mM produces a 4-8-fold stimulation of 2-deoxyglucose uptake which starts after a lag phase of 2 h and is maximal after 10-16 h. In the present study, we employed the 'membrane sheet assay' in order to re-assess the contribution of the transporter isoforms GLUT1 and GLUT4 to this effect. Immunochemical assay of glucose transporters in membranes prepared with the 'sheet assay' revealed that the effect reflected a marked increase of GLUT1 in the plasma membrane with no effect on GLUT4. Glucose deprivation increased the total cellular GLUT1 protein in parallel with the transport activity, whereas GLUT4 was unaltered. The specific PI 3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin inhibited the effect of glucose deprivation on transport activity and also on GLUT1 synthesis. Glucose deprivation produced a moderate, biphasic increase in the activity of the protein kinase Akt/PKB that was inhibitable by wortmannin. When wortmannin was added after stimulation of cells in order to assess the internalization rate of transporters, the effect of insulin was reversed considerably faster (T1/2 = 18 min) than that of glucose deprivation (T1/2 > 60 min). These data are consistent with the conclusion that the effect of glucose deprivation reflects a specific, Akt-dependent de-novo synthesis of GLUT1, and not of GLUT4, and its insertion into a plasma membrane compartment which is distinct from that of the insulin-sensitive GLUT1.
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PMID:Glucose deprivation induces Akt-dependent synthesis and incorporation of GLUT1, but not of GLUT4, into the plasma membrane of 3T3-L1 adipocytes. 1115 85

To determine the immediate effect of thiazolidinediones on human skeletal muscle, differentiated human myotubes were acutely (1 day) and myoblasts chronically (during the differentiation process) treated with troglitazone (TGZ). Chronic TGZ treatment resulted in loss of the typical multinucleated phenotype. The increase of muscle markers typically observed during differentiation was suppressed, while adipocyte markers increased markedly. Chronic TGZ treatment increased insulin-stimulated phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3-kinase activity and membranous protein kinase B/Akt (PKB/Akt) Ser-473 phosphorylation more than 4-fold. Phosphorylation of p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (42/44 MAPK/ERK) was unaltered. Basal glucose uptake as well as both basal and insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis increased approximately 1.6- and approximately 2.5-fold after chronic TGZ treatment, respectively. A 2-fold stimulation of PI 3-kinase but no other significant TGZ effect was found after acute TGZ treatment. In conclusion, chronic TGZ treatment inhibited myogenic differentiation of that human muscle while inducing adipocyte-specific gene expression. The effects of chronic TGZ treatment on basal glucose transport may in part be secondary to this transdifferentiation. The enhancing effect on PI 3-kinase and PKB/Akt involved in both differentiation and glycogen synthesis appears to be pivotal in the cellular action of TGZ.
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PMID:Effects of troglitazone on cellular differentiation, insulin signaling, and glucose metabolism in cultured human skeletal muscle cells. 1116 73

Isolated rat pancreatic islets were incubated at 3.3 (low) and 16.7 (high) mM glucose with different concentrations of the phosphotyrosine phosphatase (PTP) inhibitor, peroxovanadate (pV). At low glucose, pV stimulated insulin secretion 2- to 4-fold, but it inhibited insulin secretion at 16.7 mM. The latter effect was not due to an inhibition of glucose metabolism, nor was it inhibited by pertussis toxin pretreatment. In addition, pV stimulated insulin secretion approximately 3-fold in depolarized cells at both low and high glucose. pV markedly increased the tyrosine phosphorylation of several proteins, including IRS-1 and -2, and also increased the phosphorylation of the downstream kinases PKB/Akt and MAPK. PKB/Akt, but not MAPK, was also phosphorylated in the absence of pV. Intracellular pV-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation, including that of IRS-2, was generally increased by high glucose suggesting a further inhibition of PTP and/or enhanced tyrosine kinase activity. Thus, these data suggest that intracellular tyrosine and serine (PKB/Akt) phosphorylation are related to insulin secretion but they do not support a unique and direct link between IRS-2 tyrosine phosphorylation and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion.
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PMID:Effects of phosphotyrosine phosphatase inhibition on insulin secretion and intracellular signaling events in rat pancreatic islets. 1116 49

A recommended method for the determination of total urinary proteins as a designated comparative method (DCM) is described. The method is based on gel permeation high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). A total of 20 microl of urine diluted 5-fold with saline solution were applied to a column, eluted with 0.13 mol/l phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) at a flow rate of 1.0 ml/min at 35 degrees C, and the absorbance is monitored at 220 nm. The fraction eluted in the void volume was quantified for urinary protein, using bovine serum albumin (NIST SRM 927) as the standard. The linear range of the assay was 10--5000 mg/l, and the precision was 1.5% in two samples with concentrations of 1037 and 4338, respectively. The analytical recovery was 96--104%. Low molecular weight substances such as glucose, ascorbic acid and bilirubin did not interfere the assay. The assay was satisfactorily applied to a variety of proteins regardless of their nature or molecular weights (12.4 kDa) including beta2-microglobulin and Bence Jones Proteins. Surveys in five clinical laboratories, employing different types of HPLC apparatus with the same column type, showed satisfactory measurement precision (CV 2.1%) for three urine samples with different protein concentrations.
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PMID:Recommended method of the Japanese Association of Medical Technologists for the determination of protein in urine by HPLC. 1116 29


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