Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Several proteins with NAD+:arginine ADP-ribosyltransferase (ART) activity are expressed in T cells and affect their function. Rat T cells that express the ART designated RT6 are determinants of the expression of autoimmune diabetes. In the mouse, a 35-kDa ecto-ART modulates the proliferation and functional activity of CTL. Here we report on mouse ARTs designated Rt6-1 and Rt6-2 in BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice. mRNAs for Rt6-1 and Rt6-2 were found in spleen, thymus, and intestinal tissue of both strains, but Rt6-1 mRNA in C57BL/6 mice was detected only at low levels. Rt6-1 and Rt6-2 cDNAs from both strains were cloned and sequenced. Predicted amino acid sequences of Rt6-2 were identical in both strains, but there was an in-frame stop codon in the sequence of Rt6-1 in C57BL/6 mice not present in BALB/c mice. Recombinant C57BL/6 Rt6-2 and BALB/c Rt6-1 proteins expressed in COS1 cells exhibited ART activity and were documented to be glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked membrane proteins. COS-1 cells transfected with a C57BL/6 Rt6-1 cDNA construct expressed a truncated protein consistent in size with that predicted by the presence of the stop codon. This approximately 21-kDa protein appeared not to be glycosylphosphatidylinositol linked to the cell surface and lacked ART activity. C57BL/6 Rt6-1 therefore appears to be a naturally occurring ART knockout. The expression of Rt6-1 and Rt6-2 mRNAs in lymphoid tissues suggests that these ARTs may regulate immune system functions. Expression of Rt6-2 or another redundant ART may compensate for the lack of enzymatically active Rt6-1 in C57BL/6 mice.
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PMID:Expression in BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice of Rt6-1 and Rt6-2 ADP-ribosyltransferases that differ in enzymatic activity: C57BL/6 Rt6-1 is a natural transferase knockout. 930 Jun 95

Four mitochondrial protein kinases have been cloned. These proteins represent a new family of protein kinases, related by sequence to the bacterial protein kinases but by function to the eukaryotic serine protein kinases. Arg288 is required for recognition by BCKDK of the phosphorylation site on the E1alpha subunit of the BCKDH complex. BCKDK inhibits the dehydrogenase activity of the BCKDH complex by introducing a negative charge into the active-site pocket of the E1 component. Protein starvation of rats induces an increase in the amount of BCKDK bound to the BCKDH complex. This causes inactivation of the BCKDH complex and conserves branched-chain amino acids for protein synthesis in the protein-starved state. Expression of the different PDK isoenzymes is tissue specific, and the different PDK isoenzymes are unique with respect to kinetic parameters for ATP and ADP and sensitivity to allosteric effectors (NADH, NAD+, coenzyme A, acetyl-CoA, pyruvate, and dichloroacetate). Preliminary experiments indicate that an increased amount of PDK2 protein partly explains the increase in PDK activity that occurs in rat liver in response to chemically induced diabetes.
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PMID:Mitochondrial alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase kinases: a new family of protein kinases. 934 45

Glucose, the most potent insulin secretagogue, stimulates insulin secretion by aerobic glycolysis, but other secretagogues stimulate insulin release exclusively by mitochondrial metabolism. It is well known that in the intact pancreatic beta-cell, either kind of secretagogue can induce oscillations in metabolism (e.g., glycolysis, ATP/ADP, NAD(P)/NAD(P)H ratios) that occur with a periodicity similar to oscillations in membrane electrical potential and insulin secretion. In this study, pancreatic islet cytosol or mitochondrial fractions were incubated in the presence of physiological concentrations of substrates. Repeated additions of physiological effectors caused oscillations in the activities of the three enzymes studied. Succinate dehydrogenase activity in islet mitochondrial extracts was made to oscillate by adding oxaloacetate (5 micromol/l) to inhibit the enzyme. The enzyme was reactivated by adding acetyl-CoA (3 micromol/l), which combines with oxaloacetate in the citrate synthase reaction and lowers the concentration of oxaloacetate, thus beginning another oscillation. Pyruvate kinase activity was made to oscillate by adding fructose bisphosphate (10 micromol/l). Fructose bisphosphate was degraded to triose phosphates fairly rapidly, and, as it was degraded, there was a parallel decrease in pyruvate kinase activity. The enzyme was reactivated and made to oscillate with subsequent additions of fructose bisphosphate. The mitochondrial glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase was made to oscillate by adding EGTA to chelate calcium, which activates the enzyme. When the concentration of free calcium was raised to >0.1 micromol/l by adding more calcium, the activity of the enzyme increased. Repeated additions of chelator and calcium caused the enzyme activity to oscillate. The results with these three enzymes and physiological concentrations of naturally occurring effectors raise the possibility that the activities of not only these enzymes but of numerous enzymes oscillate in vivo in response to levels of allosteric effectors and substrates. If this is the case, pacemaker activity may result from complex effects distributed across multiple regulatory sites in both the cytosol and mitochondria, rather than from a single enzyme acting as a primary pacemaker.
Diabetes 1997 Dec
PMID:Oscillations in activities of enzymes in pancreatic islet subcellular fractions induced by physiological concentrations of effectors. 939 86

In our previous study (Diabetes 44:520-526, 1995), endothelial cells cultured in high glucose condition showed impairment of an oxidant-induced activation of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) and a reduced supply of NADPH to the glutathione redox cycle. To gain insight into the mechanisms of this impairment, the protective effect of pyruvate was studied in human umbilical vein endothelial cells cultured in either 5.5 mmol/l glucose (normal glucose [NG] condition) or 33 mmol/l glucose (high glucose [HG] condition). Through pretreatment of cells with 0.2 mmol/l pyruvate for 5-7 days in the HG condition, glucose oxidation through the PPP and total cellular NADPH content in the presence of 0.2 mmol/l H2O2 were increased by 54 (P < 0.05) and 34%, respectively, and glutathione-dependent degradation of H2O2 in HG cells was enhanced by 41% (P < 0.01), when compared with those cells to which pyruvate was not added. The addition of pyruvate significantly reduced the fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FDP) content and free cytoplasmic NADH/NAD ratio, estimated by increased pyruvate/lactate ratio in NG and HG cells exposed to H2O2. Furthermore, the addition of pyruvate also showed a 46% reduction (P < 0.01) of endothelial cell damage induced by H2O2 in HG cells. These results indicate that abnormalities in PPP activation and glutathione redox cycle activity induced by H2O2 in HG cells are compensated, and that the accentuated reductive stress is improved by an addition of pyruvate. These pyruvate effects are associated with protection against an oxidant-induced endothelial cell injury in the high glucose condition.
Diabetes 1997 Dec
PMID:Pyruvate improves deleterious effects of high glucose on activation of pentose phosphate pathway and glutathione redox cycle in endothelial cells. 939 1

This morphological study demonstrates a role for endothelial cells in generating reactive oxygen species in early stages of retinopathy in the BBZ/Wor rat, an obese, noninsulin dependent model of diabetes. Hyperglycemia induced pseudohypoxia results in an imbalance in cytosolic NADH/NAD+. In the oxygen-rich environment of the retina, NADH oxidase generates superoxide radical which is dismutated to hydrogen peroxide. Localization of hydrogen peroxide by the cerium NADH oxidase enzyme activity cytochemical localization technique shows a statistically significant increase of peroxide localization in the central retina of diabetic rats as compared to age-matched, nondiabetic controls. Endothelial cell dysfunction, indicated by leakage of endogenous serum albumin, coincided with areas of NADH oxidase activity localization. In diabetic rats there are increased levels of fibronectin in areas of hydrogen peroxide localization. This in vivo, morphological study is the first demonstration of oxidative injury and endothelial cell dysfunction in the retina of a spontaneous, noninsulin dependent model of diabetes.
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PMID:Increased NADH oxidase activity in the retina of the BBZ/Wor diabetic rat. 943 20

Glucose-stimulated insulin release from pancreatic beta cells involves a complex series of signalling pathways. In many forms of diabetes, lesions in this process cause or aggravate the diabetic phenotype. A common motif in these cascades is the elevation of intracellular Ca2+ both in the cytosolic compartment ([Ca2+]c) and within the mitochondria ([Ca2+]m). These parameters can be effectively monitored using the photoprotein aequorin which can be targeted to subcellular compartments by transfection. It is shown that physiological concentrations of glucose elicit [Ca2+]c oscillations measured with fura-2, which correlate well with oscillatory NAD(P)H fluorescence in the mitochondria. Aequorin measurements of [Ca2+]m, though unable to detect oscillations on a single cell basis, reveal large increases in intraorganellar [Ca2+] in response to glucose, elevated amino acid levels and depolarizing concentrations of KCI. These oscillations, in turn, mirror changes in the insulin secretion profile. Since several of the key mitochondrial dehydrogenases involved in oxidative phosphorylation are exquisitely sensitive to changes in [Ca2+], it is proposed that alterations in [Ca2+]m lead to increased activity of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and subsequent ATP production, thereby facilitating exocytosis of insulin from secretory granules. The involvement of the mitochondria in these processes is examined, as is the putative role of efficient mitochondrial genome transcription and translation in normal and diabetic states.
Diabetes Metab 1998 Feb
PMID:Role of mitochondrial calcium in metabolism-secretion coupling in nutrient-stimulated insulin release. 953 4

Diabetic retinopathy is thought to result from chronic changes in the metabolic pathways of the retina. Hyperglycemia leads to increased intracellular glucose concentrations, alterations in glucose degradation and an increase in lactate/pyruvate ratio. We measured lactate content in retina and other ocular and non-ocular tissues from normal and diabetic rats in the early stages of streptozotocin-induced diabetes. The intracellular redox state was calculated from the cytoplasmic [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio. Elevated lactate concentration were found in retina and cerebral cortex from diabetic rats. These concentrations led to a significant and progressive decrease in the NAD+/NADH ratio, suggesting that altered glucose metabolism is an initial step of retinopathy. It is thus possible that tissues such as cerebral cortex have mechanisms that prevent the damaging effect of lactate produced by hyperglycemia and/or alterations of the intracellular redox state.
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PMID:Changes in the redox state in the retina and brain during the onset of diabetes in rats. 958 Mar 89

Cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) has been shown to be a mediator for intracellular Ca2+ mobilization for insulin secretion by glucose in pancreatic beta cells, and CD38 shows both ADP-ribosyl cyclase to synthesize cADPR from NAD+ and cADPR hydrolase to hydrolyze cADPR to ADP-ribose. We show here that 13.8% of Japanese non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) patients examined have autoantibodies against CD38 and that the sera containing anti-CD38 autoantibodies inhibit the ADP-ribosyl cyclase activity of CD38 (P </= 0.05). Insulin secretion from pancreatic islets by glucose is significantly inhibited by the addition of the NIDDM sera with anti-CD38 antibodies (P </= 0.04-0.0001), and the inhibition of insulin secretion is abolished by the addition of recombinant CD38 (P </= 0.02). The increase of cADPR levels in pancreatic islets by glucose was also inhibited by the addition of the sera (P </= 0.05). These results strongly suggest that the presence of anti-CD38 autoantibodies in NIDDM patients can be one of the major causes of impaired glucose-induced insulin secretion in NIDDM.
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PMID:Autoantibodies against CD38 (ADP-ribosyl cyclase/cyclic ADP-ribose hydrolase) that impair glucose-induced insulin secretion in noninsulin- dependent diabetes patients. 966 81

Alterations in glucose metabolism have been implicated in the cardiovascular complications of diabetes. Previous work in this laboratory demonstrated that hearts from diabetic animals have an elevated cytosolic redox ratio (NADH/NAD+) and that this redox imbalance is probably due to elevated polyol pathway flux. We therefore hypothesized that 1) the elevated cytosolic redox ratio of diabetic hearts could result in inhibition of glycolytic enzymes sensitive to the redox state, 2) polyol pathway inhibition could restore the abnormal glucose metabolism of diabetic hearts, and 3) the relative incorporation of mixed substrates into hearts from diabetic animals would demonstrate less glycolytic and more fatty acid oxidation. Hearts from diabetic (BB/W) and nondiabetic control rats were perfused with buffers containing 13C-labeled substrates, and the metabolism of these hearts was analyzed using 13C NMR spectroscopy. Tissue samples were analyzed for metabolite levels using biochemical assay. Compared with controls, diabetic hearts had glyceraldeyde 3-phosphate levels that were four times greater than nondiabetic hearts and exhibited 91% less 13C labeling of lactate and 92% less 13C labeling of glutamate (P < 0.03). Aldose reductase inhibition with zopolrestat restored the metabolite labeling of diabetic hearts. Diabetic hearts perfused with a mixture of substrates used 53% more acetate than nondiabetic control hearts (P < 0.05), and aldose reductase inhibition lowered the acetate utilization of diabetic hearts by 9% (P < 0.05). These data suggest that glycolytic flux in diabetic hearts is inhibited at glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and that inhibition of the polyol pathway with zopolrestat increases glycolytic flux in these hearts. Furthermore, hearts from diabetic animals showed a marked dependence on fatty acids for substrate utilization compared with nondiabetic controls, consistent with inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in diabetic hearts.
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PMID:Aldose reductase inhibition improves altered glucose metabolism of isolated diabetic rat hearts. 968 98

Mutations in the hepatocyte nuclear factor-1alpha (HNF-1alpha) gene cause maturity onset diabetes of the young type 3, a form of type 2 diabetes mellitus. In mice lacking the HNF-1alpha gene, insulin secretion and intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) responses were impaired following stimulation with nutrient secretagogues such as glucose and glyceraldehyde but normal with non-nutrient stimuli such as potassium chloride. Patch clamp recordings revealed ATP-sensitive K+ currents (KATP) in beta-cells that were insensitive to suppression by glucose but normally sensitive to ATP. Exposure to mitochondrial substrates suppressed KATP, elevated [Ca2+]i, and corrected the insulin secretion defect. NAD(P)H responses to glucose were substantially reduced, and inhibitors of glycolytic NADH generation reproduced the mutant phenotype in normal islets. Flux of glucose through glycolysis in islets from mutant mice was reduced, as a result of which ATP generation in response to glucose was impaired. We conclude that hepatocyte nuclear factor-1alpha diabetes results from defective beta-cell glycolytic signaling, which is potentially correctable using substrates that bypass the defect.
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PMID:Defective pancreatic beta-cell glycolytic signaling in hepatocyte nuclear factor-1alpha-deficient mice. 973 37


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