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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
At 3-4 degrees C, the transport of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose (30 mM) was severely impaired in islets prepared from adult rats injected with streptozotocin during the neonatal period. However, at 37 degrees C, the first and second phase of glucose-stimulated insulin release were decreased to the same relative extent in perifused islets of diabetic, as compared to control, animals. Moreover, the time-related increase in the oxidative response of the islets to 16.7 mM D-glucose was less pronounced in diabetic than control rats. The activity of the mitochondrial FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase in islet homogenates of diabetic rats only represented one-fifth of that found in control rats, whereas the activity of the cytosolic NAD-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase was comparable in both types of rats. This coincided with the fact that a rise in D-glucose concentration from 2.8 to 16.7 mM failed to increase significantly L-[2-3H]glycerol conversion to 3HOH in islets from diabetic rats, in contrast to the situation found in control animals. The activity of
2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
in islet homogenates when expressed per microgram protein was not different in control and diabetic rats. Likewise, the ratio between D-[6-14C]glucose oxidation and D-[3,4-14C]glucose oxidation and the capacity of either a non-metabolized analog of L-leucine or 3-phenylpyruvate to preferentially stimulated D-[6-14C]glucose oxidation relative to D-[5-3H]glucose utilization were both unaffected in islets from diabetic rats. These findings argue against the existence of a primary defect in the Krebs cycle of diabetic rats. It is proposed that, despite an obvious alteration of the hexose transport system in the islet cells of diabetic rats, the preferential impairment of the B-cell secretory response to D-glucose, as distinct from other secretagogues, in this model of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
is mainly attributable to the low activity of FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, resulting in a decreased metabolic flow through the glycerol phosphate shuttle and a reduced rate of aerobic glycolysis.
...
PMID:Study of hexose transport, glycerol phosphate shuttle and Krebs cycle in islets of adult rats injected with streptozotocin during the neonatal period. 153 53
In islets from adult rats injected with streptozocin during the neonatal period, the oxidative and secretory responses to D-glucose are more severely affected than those evoked by L-leucine. A possible explanation for such a preferential defect was sought by comparing the rate of aerobic glycolysis, taken as the sum of D-[3,4-14C]glucose conversion to labeled CO2, pyruvate, and amino acid, with the total glycolytic flux, as judged from the conversion of D-[5-3H]glucose to 3H2O. A preferential impairment of aerobic relative to total glycolysis was found in islets from diabetic rats incubated at either low or high D-glucose concentration. This coincided in islet mitochondria of diabetic rats with a severe decrease in both the basal (no-Ca2+) generation of 3H2O from L-[2-3H]glycerol-3-phosphate and the Ca2(+)-induced increment in [3H]glycerophosphate detritiation. The mitochondria of diabetic rats were also less efficient than those of control animals in generating 14CO2 from [1-14C]-2-ketoglutarate. The
diabetes
-induced alteration of
2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
in islet mitochondria was less marked, however, than that of the FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and was not associated with any change in responsiveness to Ca2+. Sonicated islet mitochondria of diabetic rats displayed normal to slightly elevated glutamate dehydrogenase activity. We propose, therefore, that the preferential impairment of the oxidative and secretory responses of islet cells to D-glucose in this experimental model of
diabetes
may be at least partly attributable to an altered transfer of reducing equivalents into the mitochondria as mediated by the glycerol phosphate shuttle.
Diabetes
1991 Feb
PMID:Impairment of glycerol phosphate shuttle in islets from rats with diabetes induced by neonatal streptozocin. 182 72
It was found that in the livers of db/db mice with hyperinsulinemia, obesity and non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
the rates of cholesterol biosynthesis from pyruvate and, to a lesser extent, from acetate and mevalonate as well as of cholesterol ester biosynthesis from pyruvate (but not from acetate and mevalonate) are increased. Presumably, the observed changes are mediated by structural alterations in the CoA reserves, i.e., increase of free CoA to short-chain acyl-CoA and free CoA to long-chain fatty acyl-CoA indices, and of the ratio between enzymatic activities of generation and utilization of NADPH. Treatment of db/db mice with phosphopantothenate, besides eliciting changes in the CoA reserves structure towards normalization and inhibition of NADP-dependent dehydrogenases and pyruvate and
2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase
complexes, causes the diminution of cholesterol and its ester levels in the liver in the absence of any conspicuous changes in the rates of their biosynthesis from pyruvate.
...
PMID:[Effect of phosphopantothenate on the biosynthesis of cholesterol and its esters from various precursors in the liver of db/db mice]. 325 47
Three brothers with
diabetes mellitus
, thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia, and sensorineural deafness are reported. Two had, in addition, congenital septal defects. The activities of thiamine-dependent enzymes were determined in one patient, revealing low
alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
activity, which could have caused a sideroblastic anemia with secondary megaloblastic changes. The anemia was thiamine dependent. The cause of the
diabetes mellitus
was not known, but it was not type 1.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus, thiamine-dependent megaloblastic anemia, and sensorineural deafness associated with deficient alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase activity. 404 2
1. Previous studies showed that the activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase within intact rat heart mitochondria of pyruvate is much diminished in mitochondria from starved or diabetic animals [see Kerbey, Randle, Cooper, Whitehouse, Pask & Denton (1976) Biochem. J. 154, 327-348]. In the present study, diminished responses to added Ca2+ and ADP were also found in these mitochondria. 2. Starvation or
diabetes
did not affect the mitochondrial respiratory control ratio of the ATP content. Moreover, starvation and
diabetes
did not alter the response of the intramitochondrial Ca2+-sensitive enzyme,
2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase
, to changes in the extramitochondrial concentration of Ca2+ and 2-oxoglutarate, thus indicating that there were no appreciable changes in the distribution of Ca2+ and H+ across the mitochondrial inner membrane. 3. Pyruvate, Ca2+ and ADP were found to have synergistic effects on pyruvate dehydrogenase activity, particularly in mitochondria from starved and diabetic rats. 4. The results suggest that the effects of
diabetes
and starvation on pyruvate dehydrogenase are not brought about by changes in the distribution of these effectors across the mitochondrial inner membrane or by changes in the intrinsic sensitivity of the kinase or phosphatase of the pyruvate dehydrogenase system to pyruvate, Ca2+ or ADP; rather it is probably that there is an increase in the maximum activity of kinase relative to that of the phosphatase. 6. The results also lend further support to the hypothesis that adrenaline may bring about the activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase in the rat heart by an increase in the intramitochondrial concentration of Ca2+.
...
PMID:Studies on the interactions of Ca2+ and pyruvate in the regulation of rat heart pyruvate dehydrogenase activity. Effects of starvation and diabetes. 709 23
The aim of the present study is to compare normal and tumoral pancreatic islet cells in terms of both the activity of selected cytosolic and mitochondrial enzymes participating to nutrient catabolism and the intrinsic properties of FAD-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase. The activity of the glycolytic enzymes hexokinase and lactate dehydrogenase was higher in tumoral (RINm5F) than normal islet cells. The opposite was seen for glutamate decarboxylase, glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase, glutamate-pyruvate transaminase, glutamate dehydrogenase,
2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
and FAD-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (m-GDH). These findings are consistent with the high rates of glycolysis and protein synthesis seen in tumoral islet cells compared with normal islet cells, which favour mitochondrial oxidative events associated with the catabolism of D-glucose and amino acids. The intrinsic catalytic properties of m-GDH were comparable, albeit not identical, in normal and tumoral islet cells. Since a deficiency of m-GDH in pancreatic islets may represent a contributing factor in the pathogenesis of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
, it is proposed that RINm5F cells may readily yield sufficient islet m-GDH for purification and further gene cloning.
...
PMID:Activity of cytosolic and mitochondrial enzymes participating in nutrient catabolism of normal and tumoral islet cells. 776 86
In thyroidectomized rats, the activity of FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase was severely diminished in liver homogenates but not affected significantly in pancreatic islet homogenates, whilst the activity of
2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
was decreased modestly in both liver and islet homogenates. Likewise, in intact islets of thyroidectomized rats, the generation of 3HOH from [2-3H]glycerol was not decreased, and the ratio between oxidative and total glycolysis not significantly lower than in islets from sham-operated rats, at least in the presence of a high concentration of D-glucose. Nevertheless impaired oxidation of both D-[3,4-14C]glucose and D-[6-14C]glucose was observed in islets of thyroidectomized rats, the relative magnitude of such a decrease being more pronounced at a low than at a high D-glucose concentration. Such metabolic anomalies coincided with a lower level of plasma insulin and decreased output of insulin by islets incubated at low (2.8 mM), but not higher, concentrations of D-glucose. It is concluded that hypothyroidism does not mimic the deficiency in islet FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase activity found in rats with inherited or acquired non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Enzymatic, metabolic and secretory perturbations in pancreatic islets of thyroidectomized rats. 832 84
In vitro, streptozotocin (1.0-2.0 mM) fails to exert any immediate effect on the activity of FAD-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase in either pancreatic islet homogenate or freshly isolated intact islets. However, when injected in vivo, streptozotocin (40 mg/kg body weight) lowers the specific activity of the FAD-linked enzyme in islet homogenates within 24 h, whilst causing little change in
2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
and increasing glutamate dehydrogenase islet activity. In animals which became frankly hyperglycaemic as the result of the injection of streptozotocin, the activity of islet FAD-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, measured 2 weeks after administration of the B-cell cytotoxic agent, was decreased to 10-20% of its control value. Neither insulin treatment nor riboflavin supplementation affected this enzymic defect. Even when the animals injected with streptozotocin remained virtually euglycaemic, the activity of islet FAD-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase was markedly decreased. This coincided with a preferential impairment of aerobic glycolysis, as judged from the ratio between D-[3,4-14C]glucose oxidation and D-[5-3H] glucose utilization by the islets. It is proposed, therefore, that the administration of sub-diabetogenic amounts of streptozotocin to adult rats represents an alternative and easier approach to the study of B-cell dysfunction in this model of type 2 (non-insulin-dependent)
diabetes
than does streptozotocin injection in neonatal rats.
...
PMID:Streptozotocin-induced FAD-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase suppression in pancreatic islets. Relationship with the severity and duration of hyperglycaemia and resistance to insulin or riboflavin treatment. 832 33
The mitochondrial enzyme FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase plays a key role in the glucose-sensing device of the insulin-producing pancreatic B-cell. Its activity was found to be decreased in islet, but not liver, homogenates of BL/Ks-db/db mice, in which
diabetes mellitus
represents an inherited disease. The decreased activity of FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase contrasted with a normal activity of glutamate dehydrogenase and
2-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
in the islets of db/db mice. It is proposed that a site-specific defect of FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase in the pancreatic B-cell might represent a far-from-uncommon causal or contributing factor in the pathogenesis of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase deficiency in pancreatic islets of mice with hereditary diabetes. 842 47
The activities of the mitochondrial FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (m-GDH), glutamate dehydrogenase,
alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase
, glutamate-pyruvate transaminase (GPT) and glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase were measured in islet and liver homogenates from fetal, neonatal, adult male, adult female, pregnant and lactating rats. Either parallel or dissociated ontogenic changes were observed in islet and liver homogenates. The activity of islet m-GDH was slightly, albeit not significantly, lower in neonates than in adult rats, comparable in male and female adult animals, unaffected by pregnancy, and increased during lactation. It was much higher in fetal or adult islets cultured for 7 days than in freshly isolated islets from adult rats. In cultured islets from adult rats, the increase in m-GDH activity coincided with a dramatic decrease of GPT activity, a situation the mirror image of that found in several animal models of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
. The intrinsic properties of m-GDH, as judged by comparison of measurements made by either a radioisotopic or a colorimetric procedure, were not identical in islet and liver homogenates and differed between fetal and adult islets, suggesting the existence of distinct iso-enzymes. These findings illustrate adaptive changes of islet enzymes, with exclusive or partial mitochondrial location, in ontogenic situations characterized by a remodelling of fuel homeostasis.
...
PMID:Ontogeny of FAD-linked glycerophosphate dehydrogenase in rat pancreatic islets. 879 9
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