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Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Genetic analysis of the diabetic GK rat has revealed several
diabetes
susceptibility loci. Congenic strains have been established for the major
diabetes
locus, Niddm1, by transfer of GK alleles onto the genome of the normoglycemic F344 rat. Niddm1 was dissected into two subloci, physically separated in the congenic strains Niddm1b and Niddm1i, each with at least one disease susceptibility gene. Here we have mapped Niddm1b to 1 cM by genetic and pathophysiological characterization of new congenic substrains for the locus. The gene encoding
insulin-degrading enzyme
(
IDE
:) was located to this 1 cM region, and the two amino acid substitutions (H18R and A890V) identified in the GK allele reduced insulin-degrading activity by 31% in transfected cells. However, when the H18R and A890V variants were studied separately, no effects were observed, demonstrating a synergistic effect of the two variants on insulin degradation. No effect on insulin degradation was observed in cell lysates, indicating that the effect is coupled to receptor-mediated internalization of insulin. Congenic rats with the
IDE
: GK allele displayed post-prandial hyperglycemia, reduced lipogenesis in fat cells, blunted insulin-stimulated glucose transmembrane uptake and reduced insulin degradation in isolated muscle. Analysis of additional rat strains demonstrated that the dysfunctional
IDE
: allele was unique to GK. These data point to an important role for
IDE
: in the diabetic phenotype in GK.
...
PMID:Insulin-degrading enzyme identified as a candidate diabetes susceptibility gene in GK rats. 1095 57
A pathological feature of Type 2
diabetes
is deposits in the pancreatic islets primarily composed of amylin (islet amyloid polypeptide). Although much attention has been paid to the expression and secretion of amylin, little is known about the enzymes involved in amylin turnover. Recent reports suggest that
insulin-degrading enzyme
(
IDE
) may have specificity for amyloidogenic proteins, and therefore we sought to determine whether amylin is an
IDE
substrate. Amylin-degrading activity co-purified with
IDE
from rat muscle through several chromatographic steps. Metalloproteinase inhibitors inactivated amylin-degrading activity with a pattern consistent with the enzymatic properties of
IDE
, whereas inhibitors of acid and serine proteases, calpains, and the proteasome were ineffective. Amylin degradation was inhibited by insulin in a dose-dependent manner, whereas insulin degradation was inhibited by amylin. Other substrates of
IDE
such as atrial natriuretic peptide and glucagon also competitively inhibited amylin degradation. Radiolabeled amylin and insulin were both covalently cross-linked to a protein of 110 kDa, and the binding was competitively inhibited by either unlabeled insulin or amylin. Finally, a monoclonal anti-
IDE
antibody immunoprecipitated both insulin- and amylin-degrading activities. The data strongly suggest that
IDE
is an amylin-degrading enzyme and plays an important role in the clearance of amylin and the prevention of islet amyloid formation.
...
PMID:Degradation of amylin by insulin-degrading enzyme. 1097 71
Insulin metabolism in erythrocytes and hepatocytes of normal and experimental diabetic rats was studied. Insulin-degrading complex of erythrocytes and hepatocytes was investigated at low insulin concentration in blood. Kinetic parameters of insulinase depend on insulin concentration in blood have shown. Thermo-acid resistant non-competitive endogenous inhibitors were purified from erythrocytes and hepatocytes. Increase of endogenous inhibitors influence
insulin-degrading enzyme
in
diabetes
. Synthesis of
insulin-degrading enzyme
in hepatocytes of diabetic rats was reduced. These results suggest that insulin-degrading activity in erythrocytes and hepatocytes is regulated by endogenous inhibitors, by synthesis of insulinase. This change of blood insulin concentration influences practically all the components of insulin-degrading complex.
...
PMID:[Insulin degradation in hepatocytes and erythrocytes of rats in normal condition and in experimental diabetes]. 1155 15
Two substrates of
insulin-degrading enzyme
(
IDE
), amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) and insulin, are critically important in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2), respectively. We previously identified
IDE
as a principal regulator of Abeta levels in neuronal and microglial cells. A small chromosomal region containing a mutant
IDE
allele has been associated with hyperinsulinemia and glucose intolerance in a rat model of DM2. Human genetic studies have implicated the
IDE
region of chromosome 10 in both AD and DM2. To establish whether
IDE
hypofunction decreases Abeta and insulin degradation in vivo and chronically increases their levels, we characterized mice with homozygous deletions of the
IDE
gene (
IDE
--).
IDE
deficiency resulted in a >50% decrease in Abeta degradation in both brain membrane fractions and primary neuronal cultures and a similar deficit in insulin degradation in liver. The
IDE
-- mice showed increased cerebral accumulation of endogenous Abeta, a hallmark of AD, and had hyperinsulinemia and glucose intolerance, hallmarks of DM2. Moreover, the mice had elevated levels of the intracellular signaling domain of the beta-amyloid precursor protein, which was recently found to be degraded by
IDE
in vitro. Together with emerging genetic evidence, our in vivo findings suggest that
IDE
hypofunction may underlie or contribute to some forms of AD and DM2 and provide a mechanism for the recently recognized association among hyperinsulinemia,
diabetes
, and AD.
...
PMID:Insulin-degrading enzyme regulates the levels of insulin, amyloid beta-protein, and the beta-amyloid precursor protein intracellular domain in vivo. 1263 21
The gene for
insulin-degrading enzyme
(
IDE
) represents a strong positional and biological candidate for type 2 diabetes susceptibility.
IDE
maps to chromosome 10q23.3, a region linked to
diabetes
in several populations; the rat homolog has been directly implicated in
diabetes
susceptibility; and known functions of
IDE
support an important role in glucose homeostasis. We sought evidence for association between
IDE
variation and
diabetes
by mutation screening, defining local haplotype structure, and genotyping variants delineating common haplotypic diversity. An initial case-control analysis (628 diabetic probands from multiplex sibships and 604 control subjects) found no haplotypic associations, although one variant (IDE2, -179T-->C) showed modest association with
diabetes
(odds ratio [OR]1.25, P = 0.03). Linkage partitioning analyses failed to support this association, but provided borderline evidence for a different variant (IDE10, IVS20-405A-->G) (P = 0.06). Neither variant was associated with
diabetes
when replication was sought in 377 early onset diabetic subjects and 825 control subjects, though combined analysis of all typed cohorts indicated a nominally significant effect at IDE2 (OR 1.21 [1.04-1.40], P = 0.013). In the absence of convincing support for this association from linkage partitioning or analyses of continuous measures of glycemia, we conclude that analysis of over 2,400 samples provides no compelling evidence that variation in
IDE
contributes to
diabetes
susceptibility in humans.
Diabetes
2003 May
PMID:Association and haplotype analysis of the insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) gene, a strong positional and biological candidate for type 2 diabetes susceptibility. 1271 70
Linkage studies have mapped a susceptibility gene for type 2 diabetes to the long arm of chromosome 10, where we have previously identified a quantitative trait locus that affects fasting blood glucose within the Framingham Heart Study cohort. One candidate gene in this region is the
insulin-degrading enzyme
(
IDE
), which, in the GK rat model, has been associated with nonobese type 2 diabetes. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were used to map a haplotype block in the 3' end of
IDE
, which revealed association with HbA(1c), fasting plasma glucose (FPG), and mean fasting plasma glucose (mFPG) measured over 20 years. The strongest associations were found in a sample of unrelated men. The lowest trait values were associated with a haplotype (TT, f approximately 0.32) containing the minor allele of rs2209772 and the major allele of the rs1887922 SNP (FPG P < 0.001, mFPG P < 0.003, HbA(1c) P < 0.025). Another haplotype (CC, f approximately 0.16) was associated with elevated HbA(1c) (P < 0.002) and type 2 diabetes (P < 0.001, odds ratio 1.96, 95% CI 1.28-3.00). The evidence presented supports the possibility that
IDE
is a susceptibility gene for
diabetes
in populations of European descent.
Diabetes
2003 Jun
PMID:Polymorphisms in the insulin-degrading enzyme gene are associated with type 2 diabetes in men from the NHLBI Framingham Heart Study. 1276 71
A consequence of insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
is the loss of lean muscle mass as a result of accelerated proteolysis by the proteasome. Insulin inhibition of proteasomal activity requires interaction with
insulin-degrading enzyme
(
IDE
), but it is unclear if proteasome inhibition is dependent merely on insulin-NIDE binding or if degradation of insulin by
IDE
is required. To test the hypothesis that degradation by
IDE
is required for proteasome inhibition, a panel of insulin analogues with variable susceptibility to degradation by
IDE
binding was used to assess effects on the proteasome. The analogues used were [Lys(B28), Pro(B29)]-insulin (lispro), [Asp(B10)]-insulin (Asp(B10)) and [Glu(B4), Gln(B16), Phe(B17)]-insulin (EQF). Lispro was as effective as insulin at inhibition of degradation of iodine-125 ((125)I)-labeled insulin, but Asp(B10) and EQF were somewhat more effective. All agents inhibited cross-linking of (125)I-insulin to
IDE
, suggesting that all were capable of
IDE
binding. In contrast, although insulin and lispro were readily degraded by
IDE
, Asp(B10) was degraded more slowly, and EQF degradation was undetectable. Both insulin and lispro inhibited the proteasome, but Asp(B10) was less effective, and EQF had little effect. In summary, despite effective
IDE
binding, EQF was poorly degraded by
IDE
, and was ineffective at proteasome inhibition. These data suggest that insulin inhibition of proteasome activity is dependent on degradation by
IDE
. The mechanism of proteasome inhibition may be the generation of inhibitory fragments of insulin, or by displacement of
IDE
from the proteasome.
...
PMID:Insulin inhibition of the proteasome is dependent on degradation of insulin by insulin-degrading enzyme. 1277 20
Amylin (islet amyloid polypeptide) is the chief component of the islet amyloid found in type 2 diabetes, and amylin fibril precursors may be cytotoxic to pancreatic beta-cells. Little is known about the prevention of amylin aggregation. We investigated the role of
insulin-degrading enzyme
(
IDE
) in amylin degradation, amyloid deposition, and cytotoxicity in RIN-m5F insulinoma cells. Human (125)I-labeled amylin degradation was inhibited by 46 and 65% with the addition of 100 nmol/l human amylin or insulin, respectively. (125)I-labeled insulin degradation was inhibited with 100 nmol/l human amylin, rat amylin, and insulin (by 50, 50, and 73%, respectively). The
IDE
inhibitor bacitracin inhibited amylin degradation by 78% and insulin degradation by 100%. Amyloid staining by Congo red fluorescence was detectable at 100 nmol/l amylin and was pronounced at 1,000 nmol/l amylin treatment for 48 h. Bacitracin treatment markedly increased staining at all amylin concentrations. Bacitracin with amylin caused a dramatic decrease in cell viability compared with amylin alone (68 and 25%, respectively, at 10 nmol/l amylin). In summary, RIN-m5F cells degraded both amylin and insulin through a common proteolytic pathway.
IDE
inhibition by bacitracin impaired amylin degradation, increased amyloid formation, and increased amylin-induced cytotoxicity, suggesting a role for
IDE
in amylin clearance and the prevention of amylin aggregation.
Diabetes
2003 Sep
PMID:An insulin-degrading enzyme inhibitor decreases amylin degradation, increases amylin-induced cytotoxicity, and increases amyloid formation in insulinoma cell cultures. 1294 71
Diabetes mellitus
has long been considered a risk factor for the development of vascular dementia. Epidemiologic evidence has suggested that
diabetes mellitus
significantly increases risk for the development of Alzheimer's disease, independent of vascular risk factors. As insulin's role as a neuromodulator in the brain has been described, its significance for AD has also emerged. Insulin dysregulation may contribute to AD pathology through several mechanisms including decreased cortical glucose utilization particularly in the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex; increased oxidative stress through the formation of advanced glycation end-products; increased Tau phosphorylation and neurofibrillary tangle formation; increased b-amyloid aggregation through inhibition of
insulin-degrading enzyme
. Future treatment of AD might involve pharmacologic and dietary manipulations of insulin and glucose regulation.
...
PMID:Does diabetes protect or provoke Alzheimer's disease? Insights into the pathobiology and future treatment of Alzheimer's disease. 1470 4
Patients with
diabetes
are at great risk of developing lower extremity ulcers. The management of diabetic foot ulcers typically includes early recognition and appropriate clinical care. Recent advances in wound treatment include topical growth factor therapy, which has been successful in diabetic wounds. Growth factors are decreased in wound fluid; this may be due to decreased supply, increased binding, or increased degradation of the naturally occurring growth factors. This study investigates the activity of the
insulin-degrading enzyme
in wound fluid. Wound fluid was obtained from patients with (n = 17) and without (n = 4)
diabetes
. Insulin degradation was assayed by incubating [(125)I]insulin with wound fluid and precipitation in trichloroacetic acid. Fluid from nondiabetics degraded 2.22 +/- 0.73%, whereas diabetic fluid degraded significantly more (6.13 +/- 1.48%; P < 0.05). In patients with
diabetes
, the degradation of insulin by wound fluid correlated with glucose control (hemoglobin A(1c); r(2) = 0.5353; P < 0.001), and patients with worse outcomes (i.e. amputation) had higher wound fluid insulin degradation. The biochemical characteristics of insulin degradation in the wound fluid were consistent with the characteristics of
insulin-degrading enzyme
. These data suggest that glucose control is a critical factor in wound healing, but a reduction in the insulin-degrading activity in the wound fluid is also a potential therapeutic target.
...
PMID:Insulin-degrading activity in wound fluid. 1476 4
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