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Query: EC:3.1.3.9 (
glucose-6-phosphatase
)
3,081
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have proposed that hyperglycemia-induced dedifferentiation of beta-cells is a critical factor for the loss of insulin secretory function in diabetes. Here we examined the effects of the duration of hyperglycemia on gene expression in islets of partially pancreatectomized (Px) rats. Islets were isolated, and mRNA was extracted from rats 4 and 14 weeks after Px or sham Px surgery. Px rats developed different degrees of hyperglycemia; low hyperglycemia was assigned to Px rats with fed blood glucose levels less than 150 mg/dl, and high hyperglycemia was assigned above 150 mg/dl. beta-Cell hypertrophy was present at both 4 and 14 weeks. At the same time points, high hyperglycemia rats showed a global alteration in gene expression with decreased mRNA for insulin, IAPP, islet-associated transcription factors (pancreatic and duodenal homeobox-1,
BETA2
/
NeuroD
, Nkx6.1, and hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 alpha), beta-cell metabolic enzymes (glucose transporter 2, glucokinase, mitochondrial glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase, and pyruvate carboxylase), and ion channels/pumps (Kir6.2, VDCC beta, and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase 3). Conversely, genes normally suppressed in beta-cells, such as lactate dehydrogenase-A, hexokinase I,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, stress genes (heme oxygenase-1, A20, and Fas), and the transcription factor c-Myc, were markedly increased. In contrast, gene expression in low hyperglycemia rats was only minimally changed at 4 weeks but significantly changed at 14 weeks, indicating that even low levels of hyperglycemia induce beta-cell dedifferentiation over time. In addition, whereas 2 weeks of correction of hyperglycemia completely reverses the changes in gene expression of Px rats at 4 weeks, the changes at 14 weeks were only partially reversed, indicating that the phenotype becomes resistant to reversal in the long term. In conclusion, chronic hyperglycemia induces a progressive loss of beta-cell phenotype with decreased expression of beta-cell-associated genes and increased expression of normally suppressed genes, these changes being present with even minimal levels of hyperglycemia. Thus, both the severity and duration of hyperglycemia appear to contribute to the deterioration of the beta-cell phenotype found in diabetes.
...
PMID:Critical reduction in beta-cell mass results in two distinct outcomes over time. Adaptation with impaired glucose tolerance or decompensated diabetes. 1243 14
Islet-specific
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G6Pase
) catalytic-subunit-related protein (IGRP) is a homologue of the catalytic subunit of
G6Pase
, the enzyme that catalyses the final step of the gluconeogenic pathway. The analysis of IGRP-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) fusion-gene expression through transient transfection of islet-derived beta TC-3 cells revealed that multiple promoter regions, located between -306 and -97, are required for maximal IGRP-CAT fusion-gene expression. These regions correlated with trans -acting factor-binding sites in the IGRP promoter that were identified in beta TC-3 cells in situ using the ligation-mediated PCR (LMPCR) footprinting technique. However, the LMPCR data also revealed additional trans -acting factor-binding sites located between -97 and +1 that overlap two E-box motifs, even though this region by itself conferred minimal fusion-gene expression. The data presented here show that these E-box motifs are important for IGRP promoter activity, but that their action is only manifest in the presence of distal promoter elements. Thus mutation of either E-box motif in the context of the -306 to +3 IGRP promoter region reduces fusion-gene expression. These two E-box motifs have distinct sequences and preferentially bind
NeuroD
/
BETA2
(neurogenic differentiation/beta-cell E box transactivator 2) and upstream stimulatory factor (USF) in vitro, consistent with the binding of both factors to the IGRP promoter in situ, as determined using the chromatin-immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay. Based on experiments using mutated IGRP promoter constructs, we propose a model to explain how the ubiquitously expressed USF could contribute to islet-specific IGRP gene expression.
...
PMID:Upstream stimulatory factor (USF) and neurogenic differentiation/beta-cell E box transactivator 2 (NeuroD/BETA2) contribute to islet-specific glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic-subunit-related protein (IGRP) gene expression. 1254 Feb 93