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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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We studied the molecular characteristics of three naturally occurring variants in the human apolipoprotein B (apoB) signal peptide, their frequencies in non-insulin-dependent diabetic and random populations, and their association with several measures of lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. In a random sample of 197 French whites, there were two common alleles, 5'beta SP-24 and 5'beta SP-27, with frequencies of 0.35 and 0.65, respectively. In a random sample of 181 Mexican Americans, there was an additional allele, 5'beta SP-29, with a frequency of 0.03. DNA sequence analysis indicated that the signal peptide alleles consisted of the following: 5'beta SP-29 encoded 29 amino acids in the signal peptide containing two copies of the sequence CTG GCG CTG encoding Leu-Ala-Leu and a consecutive run of eight Leu-encoding codons; 5'beta SP-27 encoded 27 amino acids with a run of only six Leu codons; 5'beta SP-24 encoded 24 amino acids and contained a single copy of CTG GCG CTG and a run of six Leu codons. In the sample of French whites, average apoAI and glucose levels were significantly different among signal peptide genotypes. 5'beta SP-24/24 homozygotes had higher apoAI levels than the two other signal peptide genotypes (1.59 vs. 1.42 g/L, respectively). Heterozygous 5'beta SP-24/27 individuals had the highest glucose levels. In the random sample of Mexican Americans, average glucose levels were also significantly different among signal peptide genotypes. However, the rank order of average glucose levels was not the same between the two samples.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes 1991 Nov
PMID:Signal peptide-length variation in human apolipoprotein B gene. Molecular characteristics and association with plasma glucose levels. 193 12

The possibility of using xenogeneic islets for transplantation in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) necessitates characterization of their potential for growth and functional differentiation. Fetal pig pancreas (FPP) of various gestational ages was examined with respect to morphology, ability to produce insulin before and during culture, and development and function in nude mice. Insulin-containing beta cells were present, but distinct islets were not apparent in FPP even in late gestation, and did not develop during culture. FPP remained viable and produced insulin for up to 30 days in vitro. Mitotic figures were seen in cultured tissue. Culture on a gelfoam raft resulted in more viable tissue than free-floating culture. Culture in a high concentration of O2 (90% O2/10% CO2) was detrimental compared with culture in 10% CO2 in air. Responses to static incubation in secretagogues showed that IMBX, theophylline, and tolbutamide all stimulated insulin secretion, but high glucose concentration (5 g/L), arginine, and leucine did not. The potential of this tissue for growth and its ability to regulate blood glucose levels appropriately were tested in athymic (nu/nu) mice. Pancreatic tissue from fetuses as young as 4 weeks gestation showed growth after transplantation into athymic mice, with representation of the major pancreatic endocrine cells demonstrated by selective immunochemical staining. The increase in the size of the grafts showed an impressive proliferative capacity, and histology confirmed mitotic activity and islet structure in the graft. The amount of endocrine tissue in grafts reflected the condition of the explants at the time of grafting, and prolonged culture times were detrimental to eventual graft size. Functional capability of the grafted FPP to release insulin in response to hyperglycemia was tested by transplantation into mice made diabetic with streptozotocin. Blood glucose levels, animal weights and survival, and the histological appearance of the tissue after graft nephrectomy indicated that either fresh tissue or tissue cultured for up to 8 days (Gelfoam; 10% CO2 in air) had better eventual graft function then FPP grown in 90% O2 or transplanted as a secondary graft following an interim period to allow gestational maturation in a nondiabetic nu/nu host. Return to euglycemia took 3-4 months after transplantation of FPP. The in vitro characteristics of FPP are similar to those reported for human fetal tissue, and since FPP is capable of growth and proliferation in vivo and has the ability to normalize hyperglycemia, further investigation of FPP to establish its suitability as a source of xenogeneic insulin-secreting tissue for human transplantation is warranted.
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PMID:Fetal pig pancreas. Preparation and assessment of tissue for transplantation, and its in vivo development and function in athymic (nude) mice. 196 85

The BB/W strain of rats develop spontaneous insulin-dependent diabetes. Diabetic BB/W rats have a marked insulinopenia and greatly diminished levels of insulin in their pancreas. Using a radioimmunoassay for rat pancreatic polypeptide (PP), we have examined the content of PP in extracts of the total pancreas and also the regional PP concentration of the three pancreatic lobes. Radioimmunoassays for glucagon, somatostatin (SRIF) and insulin were also made on these extracts. Compared with nondiabetic BB/W rat pancreas, pancreatic extracts from severely diabetic BB/W rats contained 30% as much PP, 31% as much glucagon, 19% as much SRIF, and 0.5% as much insulin. The rat PP radioimmunoassay was used to determine the elution pattern of PP-like antigens in gel chromatography fractions and to measure in vitro secretion of PP from perifused pancreatic slices obtained from diabetic and nondiabetic animals. PP-like immunoreactivity was observed in two zones in the elution from the gel columns when extracts from normal or diabetic rats were chromatographed. The major zone of immunoreactivity eluting at the volume expected for intact monometric rat PP accounted for 67% of the PP-like immunoreactivity in the case of nondiabetic rats and greater than 80% of the PP-like immunoreactivity found in extracts from severely diabetic rats. The minor zone of PP-like immunoreactivity eluted at a volume similar to the position of tetradecapeptide SRIF contained the remainder of detected PP-like immunoreactivity. Tissue slices from diabetic rats secreted more PP and glucagon than slices from nondiabetic rats when slices were perifused with a medium containing leucine, carbachol, and cholecystokinin, even though diabetic pancreas has smaller amounts of PP, glucagon, SRIF, and insulin. Stimulated insulin secretion was virtually absent when tissue slices from diabetic rats were perifused. These results indicate that in the BB/W diabetic rat: (a) pancreatic glucagon, PP, and SRIF are moderately decreased and insulin levels are drastically reduced, (b) lower levels of degraded or low molecular weight form of immunoreactive PP occurs in the diabetic rat pancreas compared to the normal rat, (c) the diabetic pancreas secretes more PP and glucagon and much less insulin than pancreas from nondiabetic rats when perifused under stimulating conditions. The diabetes occurring in the BB/W appears to be a severe type I diabetes characterized by reduced content of insulin, glucagon, SRIF, and PP in the pancreas of these animals. However, secretion of glucagon and PP were not reduced in this in vitro system.
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PMID:Pancreatic polypeptide and other pancreatic hormones in spontaneously diabetic BB/W rats. 198 Jul 35

A radioimmunoassay for the GLUT1 glucose transporter was developed with a synthesized peptide based on the sequence of the cDNA for GLUT1. A peptide corresponding to the COOH-terminal domain of the GLUT1 glucose transporter (Thr-Pro-Glu-Glu-Leu-Phe-His-Pro-Leu-Gly-Ala-Asp-Ser-Gln-Val) was synthesized and conjugated to keyhole limpet hemocyanin through the NH2-terminal of the peptide. An antibody was raised against this complex and affinity purified with the immobilized peptide. A second peptide, with tyrosine residue added to the NH2-terminal of the above peptide, was synthesized and used as a standard and iodinated for preparation of the radioactive ligand. The assay is highly reproducible, sensitive, and specific for the COOH-terminal domain of the GLUT1 glucose transporter. It has no cross-reactivity with the other glucose-transporter isoforms GLUT2 and GLUT4. Furthermore, the results obtained with this radioimmunoassay on the number of glucose transporters in human erythrocytes were in good agreement with previous studies based on cytochalasin B binding, suggesting that this radioimmunoassay is able to quantify the number of glucose transporters. The assay is completed within 4 h and can be used for simultaneous measurement of GLUT1 in many samples. In addition, it can be applied to the measurement of GLUT1 in several types of tissue.
Diabetes 1991 Mar
PMID:Peptide-based radioimmunoassay specific for GLUT1 glucose transporter. 199 71

To determine whether the responses of muscle protein metabolism to insulin and amino acids in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) were different from those in nondiabetic subjects, leg tissue kinetics of [15N]phenylalanine and [1-13C]leucine and its metabolites were measured in eight insulin-withdrawn IDDM patients and eight nondiabetic subjects during basal insulinemia and during infusion of insulin (0.29 nmol.min-1.m-2). The diabetic patients were studied in the absence of amino acids, and both groups were studied during infusion of a mixed-amino acid solution (AA). In the diabetic patients, insulin alone and combined with additional AA reduced leg tissue phenylalanine release by 42 and 41%, respectively (both P less than 0.05), but uptake was unchanged. Leg tissue leucine oxidation was unchanged by insulin alone but was increased (P = 0.012) fourfold during insulin infusion with additional AA. In the nondiabetic subjects, insulin with AA infusion increased leg tissue phenylalanine uptake (45.7 +/- 7.5 to 73.1 +/- 7.3 nmol.min-1.100 g-1, P less than 0.01). Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in the diabetic patients (1.60 +/- 0.28 mumol.min-1.100 g-1, P = 0.04). These results suggest that, in IDDM patients, 1) infusion of insulin fails to stimulate muscle protein synthesis even when combined with a substantially increased provision of AA, and 2) compared with nondiabetic subjects, muscle protein synthesis as well as glucose uptake exhibit blunted responses to insulin.
Diabetes 1991 Apr
PMID:Effects of insulin and amino acids on leg protein turnover in IDDM patients. 201 51

Human growth hormone (hGH) and prednisone cause insulin resistance and glucose intolerance. However, it is unknown whether hGH and prednisone antagonize insulin action on protein, fat, and carbohydrate metabolism by a common or independent mechanism. Therefore, protein, fat, and carbohydrate metabolism was assessed simultaneously in four groups of eight subjects each after 7 days of placebo, recombinant DNA hGH (rhGH; 0.1 mg.kg-1.day-1), prednisone (0.8 mg.kg-1.day-1), or rhGH and prednisone administration after an 18-h fast and during gut infusion of glucose and amino acids (fed state). Fasting plasma glucose concentrations were similar during placebo and rhGH but elevated (P less than 0.001) during combined treatment, whereas plasma insulin concentrations were higher (237 +/- 57 pmol/ml, P less than 0.001) during combined than during placebo, rhGH, or prednisone treatment (34, 52, and 91 pM, respectively). In the fed state, plasma glucose concentrations were elevated only during combined treatment (11.3 +/- 2.1 mM, P less than 0.001). Plasma insulin concentrations were elevated during therapy with prednisone alone and rhGH alone (667 +/- 72 and 564 +/- 65 pmol/ml, respectively, P less than 0.001) compared with placebo (226 +/- 44 pmol/ml) but lower than with the combined rhGH and prednisone treatment (1249 +/- 54 pmol/ml, P less than 0.01). Protein oxidation [( 14C]leucine) increased (P less than 0.001) with prednisone therapy, decreased (P less than 0.001) with rhGH treatment, and was normal during the combined treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes 1991 Jan
PMID:Differential effects of prednisone and growth hormone on fuel metabolism and insulin antagonism in humans. 201 69

Perifused islets from rats infused for 7 days with 40% glucose exhibited an altered secretory response to selected stimuli. Both phases of insulin release were blunted when 20 mM L-leucine was tested; the secretory response to a subsequent leucine stimulation was also blunted compared with the control group. The ability of 20 mM alpha-ketoisocaproate to stimulate the release of insulin was also greatly diminished in islets from glucose-infused rats. The secretory response to 50 microM tolbutamide plus 7 mM glucose by perifused islets from glucose-infused rats was 45% lower than in the control group. In addition, the response to a subsequent 10 mM glucose stimulation was lost. On the other hand, islets from glucose-infused rats responded to 20 microM forskolin plus 16.7 mM glucose with on significant change in the amount of insulin released during both phases of stimulation compared with the control group. The response to 100 nM phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate was 3.1-fold higher in islets from glucose-infused compared with saline-infused rats. The finding that chronic infusions of glucose lead to selective impairment of the secretory response to fuel stimuli and agents such as tolbutamide that act on metabolically regulated K+ channels gives support to the notion that alterations in the generation of metabolic coupling signals might be involved in the phenomenon described here.
Diabetes 1991 Jan
PMID:Insulin secretory response to secretagogues by perifused islets from chronically glucose-infused rats. 201 70

Angiotensin carboxypeptidase (ACP) activity has been detected in urine samples from normal subjects and patients with hypertension and diabetes by determining the enzyme's ability to convert angiotensin I to des-Leu angiotensin I. Gel filtration chromatography of a concentrated urine sample indicated that about equal amounts of the enzyme exist as 100 kDa and 500 kDa molecular weight forms, respectively. This ACP activity co-eluted with activity that cleaved histidine from des-Leu angiotensin I to form angiotensin II and activity that cleaved tyrosine from benzyloxycarbonyl-glutamyl-tyrosine (ZGT). These results suggest that the urinary ACP activity is due to cathepsin A as we have reported previously for the porcine kidney enzyme. Analysis of sequential urine samples from a single individual over a 6-day period revealed as much as a 6-fold fluctuation in creatinine-normalized ACP activity. Of five male healthy adult subjects, the creatinine-normalized urinary ACP activity ranged from 1.7 to 3.7 mU/mL with a mean of 2.8 mU/mL. However, five male patients with renovascular hypertension had elevated levels of ACP activity with a mean of 11.6 mU/mL. Of five male patients with diabetic nephropathy, all had elevated ACP activity levels with a mean of 21.0 mU/mL. It is concluded that ACP activity in the urine is due to cathepsin A probably derived from kidney tissue, and that the release is increased in patients with kidney damage. We suggest that urinary ACP activity should be evaluated further for a possible relationship to renal hypertension and as a potentially early marker for diabetic nephropathy.
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PMID:Angiotensin carboxypeptidase activity in urine from normal subjects and patients with kidney damage. 201 86

A fraction from diabetic rat serum containing a low-molecular-weight (800-1000) somatomedin inhibitor (SI) alters growth and development in both neurulation and early limb bud staged mouse embryos in vitro. Previous studies suggested that an accumulation of serum proteins and morphological changes of the visceral yolk sac (VYS) were produced following exposure to the SI in early limb bud staged conceptuses. The morphological changes, characterized by the presence of large endosomes in the endodermal cells, suggested that the SI altered histiotrophic nutrition, whereby proteins are pinocytosed by the endodermal VYS cells and degraded to constituent amino acids. Therefore, the effects of the SI on pinocytosis and protein degradation by the VYS were evaluated using the whole embryo culture system. Results showed that the SI reduced fluid phase pinocytosis as determined by the uptake of [U-14C]sucrose, but that accumulation of [3H]leucine-labeled hemoglobin ([3H]Hb) by the VYS was greater following exposure to the SI than in controls. In contrast, the accumulation of 3H-labeled amino acids in the embryo (produced from the degradation of [3H]Hb by the VYS) was reduced by the SI. The extent of amino acid reduction in embryonic accumulation is dependent upon the concentration of SI in the culture medium and correlates with the incidence of malformations produced by the SI, i.e., high rates of malformations occur with large reductions in embryonic 3H-labeled amino acid accumulation. The apparent paradox of high [3H]Hb accumulation in the presence of decreased pinocytosis appears to be the result of altered processing of the [3H]Hb in the endodermal cells. The altered processing decreases the "elimination" of the proteins from the VYS and results in the decrease in 3H-labeled amino acid present in the embryo proper. Therefore, the SI appears to alter two processes of VYS histiotrophic function. (1) decreased pinocytosis and (2) altered protein processing, ultimately resulting in a decreased availability of substrates for the embryo. During the early stages of embryogenesis in the human, the trophoblast cells of the placenta are responsible for the transport of nutrients from the maternal to embryonic systems. Since these cells show high phagocytic and pinocytotic activities, the SI may also disrupt these processes in the chorioallantoic placenta and contribute to diabetes-induced embryopathies.
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PMID:Altered visceral yolk sac function produced by a low-molecular-weight somatomedin inhibitor. 204 42

Fifteen women with positive islet cell antibodies were identified in a group of 115 consecutive patients found to have impaired glucose tolerance in pregnancy. These subjects were postulated to be at increased risk of later developing type 1 diabetes mellitus. They were examined post--partum for HLA types known to be associated with this disease and for any increase in Interleukin 2 receptor expression or alteration of T cell subsets of possible relevance to its pathogenesis. Fifteen women negative for islet antibodies and with normal glucose tolerance during previous pregnancy and 15 women with a normal fasting plasma glucose who had never been pregnant were studied as controls. Using flow cytometric techniques a significant increase in both the number and proportion of activated (Interleukin 2 receptor, CD25) lymphocytes in the peripheral blood of women who had islet cell antibodies and previous impaired glucose tolerance in pregnancy was found (0.14 +/- SE 0.03 x 10(9)/l; 7.1 +/- 1.1%) when compared with normal parous controls (0.09 +/- 0.01 x 10(9)/l; 4.2 +/- 0.6%), p less than 0.01 x 10(9)/l; showed significant increases when compared with nulliparous controls (0.04 +/- 0.01 x 10(9)/l; 2.1 +/- 0.2%), p less than 0.01. No differences were detected between the three groups with respect to total T-lymphocytes (CD3), helper T-lymphocytes (CD4), suppressor cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CD8), or the inducer of suppressor (Leu 3+/Leu 8+) subset of T-lymphocytes. Three women persistently islet cell antibody positive, two of whom were HLA DR4, showed impaired glucose tolerance at the time of lymphocyte subset analysis, while two further patients, one DR3 and the other DR4, had developed type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes. No correlation between increased Interleukin 2 receptor expression and glucose intolerance was demonstrated. We conclude that islet cell antibody positive women with impaired glucose tolerance during pregnancy are at increased risk of later developing type 1 diabetes but that heightened immune activation present in these women is in part a post-pregnancy phenomenon.
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PMID:Increased interleukin 2 receptor expression in post-gestational women: relationship to impaired glucose tolerance and islet cell antibodies in pregnancy. 210 86


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