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Query: EC:2.7.11.31 (
AMP-activated protein kinase
)
13,065
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Obesity, a state of increased adipose tissue mass, is a major cause for type 2 diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and hypertension, resulting in clustering of risk factors for atherosclerosis. Heterozygous PPARgamma knockout mice and KKA(y) mice administered with a PPARgamma antagonist were protected from high-fat diet-induced adipocyte hypertrophy and insulin resistance. Moderate reduction of PPARgamma activity prevented adipocyte hypertrophy, thereby diminution of TNFalpha, resistin, and FFA and upregulation of adiponectin and leptin. These alterations led to reduction of tissue TG content in muscle/liver, thereby ameliorating insulin resistance. Insulin resistance in the lipoatrophic mice and KKA(y) mice were ameliorated by replenishment of adiponectin. Moreover, adiponectin transgenic mice ameliorated insulin resistance and diabetes, but not the obesity of ob/ob mice. Furthermore, targeted disruption of the adiponectin gene caused moderate insulin resistance and glucose intolerance. In muscle, adiponectin activated AMP kinase and PPARgamma pathways, thereby increasing beta-oxidation of lipids, leading to decreased TG content, which ameliorated muscle insulin resistance. In the liver, adiponectin also activated
AMPK
, thereby downregulating PEPCK and G6Pase, leading to decreased glucose output from the liver. In conclusion, PPARgamma plays a central role in the regulation of adipocyte hypertrophy and insulin sensitivity. The upregulation of the adiponectin pathway by PPARgamma may play a role in the increased insulin sensitivity of heterozygous PPARgamma knockout mice, and activation of adiponectin pathway may provide novel therapeutic strategies for obesity-linked disorders such as type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome.
...
PMID:[The mechanisms by which PPARgamma and adiponectin regulate glucose and lipid metabolism]. 1450 Nov 64
Several links relate mitochondrial metabolism and type 2 diabetes or chronic hyperglycaemia. Among them, ATP synthesis by oxidative phosphorylation and cellular energy metabolism (ATP/ADP ratio), redox status and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, membrane potential and substrate transport across the mitochondrial membrane are involved at various steps of the very complex network of glucose metabolism. Recently, the following findings (1) mitochondrial ROS production is central in the signalling pathway of harmful effects of hyperglycaemia, (2)
AMPK
activation is a major regulator of both glucose and lipid metabolism connected with cellular energy status, (3) hyperglycaemia by inhibiting glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) by a cAMP mechanism plays a crucial role in NADPH/NADP ratio and thus in the pro-oxidant/anti-oxidant cellular status, have deeply changed our view of diabetes and related complications. It has been reported that metformin has many different cellular effects according to the experimental models and/or conditions. However, recent important findings may explain its unique efficacy in the treatment of hyperglycaemia- or insulin-resistance related complications. Metformin is a mild inhibitor of respiratory chain complex 1; it activates
AMPK
in several models, apparently independently of changes in the AMP-to-ATP ratio; it activates G6PDH in a model of high-fat related insulin resistance; and it has antioxidant properties by a mechanism (s), which is (are) not completely elucidated as yet. Although it is clear that metformin has non-mitochondrial effects, since it affects erythrocyte metabolism, the mitochondrial effects of metformin are probably crucial in explaining the various properties of this drug.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial metabolism and type-2 diabetes: a specific target of metformin. 1450 5
Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) has been defined as a disease of the cardiac sarcomere, although sarcomeric protein mutations are not found in one third of cases. We have recently shown that HCM associated with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (WPW) and conduction disease can be caused by mutations in PRKAG2, which encodes the gamma2 subunit of
AMPK
, an enzyme central to cellular energy homeostasis.
AMPK
is a heterotrimer composed of one catalytic subunit (alpha) and two regulatory subunits (beta and gamma). Seven known genes encode the subunit isoforms (alpha1, alpha2, beta1, beta2, gamma1, gamma2, gamma3) and all are expressed in the heart. To better understand the role of
AMPK
mutations in HCM/WPW and other inherited cardiomyophathies, all 7 subunit genes were screened for mutations in a panel of probands: 3 with HCM/WPW, 4 with DCM/WPW, 38 with HCM alone (in whom contractile protein mutations had not been found) and 13 with DCM alone. In total, 73 amplimers were screened in the 58 probands and a number of polymorphisms, including non-conservative substitutions, were identified. However, no further disease-causing mutations were found in any
AMPK
subunit gene. These results indicate that HCM with WPW is a distinct, but genetically heterogeneous, condition caused by mutations in PRKAG2 and in an unknown gene or genes, not involved in the
AMPK
complex. Mutations in PRKAG2 appear to specifically cause HCM with WPW and conduction disease, and not other inherited cardiomyopathies. As deleterious alleles were not found in other
AMPK
subunit isoforms, the mutations affecting PRKAG2 are likely to confer a specific alteration of
AMPK
function of particular importance in the myocardium.
...
PMID:Mutation analysis of AMP-activated protein kinase subunits in inherited cardiomyopathies: implications for kinase function and disease pathogenesis. 1451 35
The purpose of this study was to elucidate the mechanisms underlying low-intensity exercise-induced peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator-1alpha (PGC-1alpha) protein expression in rat skeletal muscles. Rats (5-6 wk old) swam without a load and ran on the treadmill at a speed of 13 m/min, respectively, in two 3-h sessions separated by 45 min of rest. PGC-1alpha content in epitrochlearis muscle (EPI) was increased by 75 and 95%, immediately and 6 h after swimming, respectively, with no increase in PGC-1alpha content in the soleus (SOL). After running, PGC-1alpha content in EPI was unchanged, whereas a 107% increase in PGC-1alpha content was observed in SOL 6 h after running. Furthermore, in EPI and SOL as well as other muscles (triceps, plantaris, red and white gastrocnemius), PGC-1alpha expression was enhanced concomitant with reduced glycogen postexercise, suggesting that expression of PGC-1alpha occurs in skeletal muscle recruited during exercise. PGC-1alpha content in EPI was increased after 18-h in vitro incubation with 0.5 mM 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside (AICAR) and 4 mM caffeine. However, AICAR incubation did not affect PGC-1alpha content in the SOL, whereas caffeine incubation increased it. These results suggest that exercise-induced PGC-1alpha expression in skeletal muscle may be mediated by at least two exercise-induced signaling factors:
AMPK
activation and Ca2+ elevation. The number of factors involved (both
AMPK
and Ca2+, or Ca2+ only) in exercise-induced PGC-1alpha expression may differ among muscles.
...
PMID:Effects of acute bouts of running and swimming exercise on PGC-1alpha protein expression in rat epitrochlearis and soleus muscle. 1457 Jul
SNARK, the fourth member of the
AMPK
catalytic subunit family, was originally identified in a rat kidney cDNA library, and in this study we isolated its human homologue. A BLAST search analysis using rat SNARK protein yielded a single high homology clone, DKFZp434J037, isolated from human testis, and since its hypothetical protein showed 84% homology to rat SNARK protein, we assumed DKFZp434J037 to be the human SNARK cDNA. The human SNARK cDNA is 3443bp long and encodes a 628 amino acid protein having an estimated molecular weight of 69kDa, and its chromosomal localization had been assigned to 1q32.1. The same as other members of
AMPK
catalytic subunit family, human SNARK showed AMP-dependent GST-SAMS phosphorylation activity and enhanced HepG2 cell survival during glucose starvation. Human SNARK-overexpressing HepG2 cells (H/SNK) showed acute cell-cell detachment when exposed to glucose-free medium and the cell-cell detachment correlated well with the detection of G-actin. Deletion mutant analysis strongly suggested that the putative catalytic domain of SNARK is necessary for the cell-cell detachment, and Western blotting analysis showed that phosphorylation of FAK and PKC, which were dramatically increased by glucose starvation in HepG2 cells, was markedly suppressed by SNARK.
...
PMID:Induction of cell-cell detachment during glucose starvation through F-actin conversion by SNARK, the fourth member of the AMP-activated protein kinase catalytic subunit family. 1457 7
The
AMPK
(
AMP-activated protein kinase
) cascade plays a key role in regulating energy metabolism. Conditions which cause a decrease in the ATP/AMP ratio lead to activation of
AMPK
. Once activated,
AMPK
initiates a series of responses that act to restore the energy balance of the cell. In skeletal muscle, activation of
AMPK
increases both glucose uptake and fatty acid oxidation, raising the possibility that
AMPK
can bypass the glucose/fatty acid cycle. This review focuses on the role of
AMPK
in the regulation of glucose and fatty acid metabolism in muscle. Recently, naturally occurring mutations within the gamma isoforms have been identified which lead to altered metabolic regulation in cardiac and skeletal muscle and suggest an important role for the kinase in regulating glycogen metabolism.
...
PMID:Bypassing the glucose/fatty acid cycle: AMP-activated protein kinase. 1464 Oct 16
The
AMPK
(5'
AMP-activated protein kinase
) is becoming recognized as a critical regulator of energy metabolism. However, many of these effects in muscle metabolism have been ascribed to
AMPK
based on the use of the unspecific activator AICAR (5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-beta-D-ribofuranoside). Using mouse models in which
AMPK
activity has been specifically blocked (kinase dead) or knocked out we and others have been able to conduct studies gaining more conclusive data on the role of
AMPK
in muscle metabolism. In this mini-review focus is on
AMPK
and its regulatory role for glucose transport and GS (glycogen synthase) activity in skeletal muscle, indicating that
AMPK
is a GS kinase in vivo which might influence GS activity during exercise and that
AMPK
is involved in AICAR/hypoxia-induced glucose transport but not or only partially in contraction-stimulated glucose transport.
...
PMID:Transgenic models--a scientific tool to understand exercise-induced metabolism: the regulatory role of AMPK (5'-AMP-activated protein kinase) in glucose transport and glycogen synthase activity in skeletal muscle. 1464 Oct 45
Accumulation of intracellular lipid by pancreatic islet beta-cells has been proposed to inhibit normal glucose-regulated insulin secretion ('glucolipotoxicity'). In the present study, we determine whether over-expression in rat islets of the lipogenic transcription factor SREBP1c (sterol-regulatory-element-binding protein-1c) affects insulin release, and whether changes in islet lipid content may be reversed by activation of
AMPK
(
AMP-activated protein kinase
). Infection with an adenovirus encoding the constitutively active nuclear fragment of SREBP1c resulted in expression of the protein in approx. 20% of islet cell nuclei, with a preference for beta-cells at the islet periphery. Real-time PCR (TaqMan) analysis showed that SREBP1c up-regulated the expression of FAS (fatty acid synthase; 6-fold), acetyl-CoA carboxylase-1 (2-fold), as well as peroxisomal-proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (7-fold), uncoupling protein-2 (1.4-fold) and Bcl2 (B-cell lymphocytic-leukaemia proto-oncogene 2; 1.3-fold). By contrast, levels of pre-proinsulin, pancreatic duodenal homeobox-1, glucokinase and GLUT2 (glucose transporter isoform-2) mRNAs were unaltered. SREBP1c-transduced islets displayed a 3-fold increase in triacylglycerol content, decreased glucose oxidation and ATP levels, and a profound inhibition of glucose-, but not depolarisation-, induced insulin secretion. Culture of islets with the
AMPK
activator 5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide riboside decreased the expression of the endogenous SREBP1c and FAS genes, and reversed the effect of over-expressing active SREBP1c on FAS mRNA levels and cellular triacylglycerol content. We conclude that SREBP1c over-expression, even when confined to a subset of beta-cells, leads to defective insulin secretion from islets and may contribute to some forms of Type II diabetes.
...
PMID:Over-expression of sterol-regulatory-element-binding protein-1c (SREBP1c) in rat pancreatic islets induces lipogenesis and decreases glucose-stimulated insulin release: modulation by 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside (AICAR). 1469 Apr 55
In this report, we analyse the effects of osmotic shock on signal transduction in CHO cells. We demonstrate that at least three different kinase cascades are switched on upon osmotic shock, namely PKA,
AMPK
, and MLTK. Whereas PKA from cells treated with forskolin activated stress kinase p38, PKA from cells treated with sorbitol did not activate p38, although the enzyme is activated in both cases as analysed in vitro using a specific peptide target. Further, osmolar shock activated
AMPK
but treatment of the cells with the
AMPK
activator 5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide (AICAr) did not result in p38 activation, strongly suggesting that
AMPK
is not involved in stress kinase activation. Transfection of CHO cells with dominant negative recombinants of MLTKalpha resulted in inhibition of sorbitol-mediated p38 activation, indicating that the mixed-lineage kinase is involved in the activation of p38 by sorbitol. Finally, in CHO cells overexpressing wild-type MLTKalpha, no activation of
AMPK
of PKA could be demonstrated, indicating that the activated kinase cascades are not involved in a cross-talk process.
...
PMID:Multiple independent kinase cascades are targeted by hyperosmotic stress but only one activates stress kinase p38. 1469 38
Skeletal muscle has evolved an impressive array of mechanisms for peripherally mediated control of ATP homeostasis. Some of these mechanisms are intracellular, and others are extracellular and include influences on the cross-bridge cycle itself and substrate supply. This paper introduces three distinctly different topics that nevertheless all have ATP defense in common. The role of ADP in fatigue is controversial but has recently been more clearly delineated so that an effect on alleviating force declines during extreme fatigue is plausible. AMP plays its role by activating the protein-kinase,
AMPK
, which is a key sensor of cellular energy stress.
AMPK
has different isoforms, is not uniformly distributed in the cell, and its activation is carefully controlled. It has multiple effects including improvements in substrate supply for the metabolic pathways producing ATP and inhibition of anabolic processes to further spare ATP. Red blood cells have the capacity to sense hypoxia and to release vasodilators where there is a locally increased demand for blood supply. The papers in this series emphasize the important positive roles of metabolites and sensors of fatigue in the balance between ATP supply and demand.
...
PMID:Protecting muscle ATP: positive roles for peripheral defense mechanisms-introduction. 1470 62
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