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

Previously we demonstrated prevention of immune rejection in rat islet allografts by continuous subcutaneous (s.c.) administration of FK506 and also showed that FK506 might have diabetogenic effects (Ryu and Yasunami (1991) Transplantation, 52, 599-605). The purpose of the present study was to characterize further diabetogenic effects of FK506 on renal subcapsular islet isografts in rat. Continuous s.c. administration of FK506 (3 mg/kg/day) for 35 days produced glucose intolerance in the recipients as demonstrated by intravenous (i.v.) glucose tolerance test at the end (35 days) and after discontinuation (90 days) of FK506 administration. Morphologically, beta cells in the grafts of FK506-treated group were degranulated at 35 and 120 days after transplantation. Electron microscopically, degranulation, marked swelling of rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus and mitochondria were detected in beta cells of the grafts treated with FK506 at 35 days, and at 120 days there was moderate structural recovery in the organella. These findings clearly demonstrate that FK506 has diabetogenic effects on renal subcapsular islet isografts in rat and also suggests potential reversibility of damages by FK506 in beta cells of the grafts.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract 1993 Apr
PMID:Diabetogenic effects of FK506 on renal subcapsular islet isografts in rat. 768 76

FK506, a agent extracted from a streptomyces, has more potent immunosuppressive properties compared with cyclosporin in vitro. We compared the preventive effect of FK506 on the development of diabetes mellitus with that of cyclosporin in BB rats, which are regarded as a useful model of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. BB rats aged 30 days were treated intramuscularly with FK506 (0.1 mg/kg/day and 0.32 mg/kg/day) or with cyclosporin (10 mg/kg, alternate days) until 150 days of age. Diabetes developed in 2 (10.5%) of 19 rats treated with the lower dose of FK506 and none of 20 rats with the higher dose of FK506; on the other hand, 1 (5.3%) of 19 rats treated with cyclosporin developed diabetes. In contrast, 9 (36.0%) of 25 control rats became diabetic. The cumulative incidence of diabetes mellitus in the group treated with FK506 (0.32 mg/kg) showed a decrease similar to or more than that of the cyclosporin-treated group. Histological examination showed that FK506 and cyclosporin prevented the reduction in the average size of islets and in the area of beta cells. The analysis of lymphocyte subsets proved the decrease of W3/25: OX8 ratio in both FK506- and cyclosporin-treated groups. These data suggest that the administration of FK506 might be a more useful tool for preventing the development of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Effect of FK506 on the development of diabetes in BB rats in comparison with that of cyclosporin. 769 21

The growing success of organ transplantation for the treatment of diabetes mellitus and end-stage renal, heart, lung, and liver disease is attributable, in part, to improvements in immunosuppressive regimens. This article reviews the immune response and the mechanism by which many immunosuppressants exert their effects. Immunosuppressants discussed include azathioprine, glucocorticoids, cyclosporine A, cyclosporine G, FK506, rapamycin, mycophenolic acid, mycophenolate mofetil (RS-61443), mizoribine (bredinin), brequinar sodium, and deoxyspergualine. The efficacy and nonspecificity of these agents has led to significant side effects from their use, which can be predicted based on their mechanisms of action. The development and use of more specific immunosuppressants or the design of protocols, which would induce organ tolerance, may result in long-term organ survival without infectious or malignant complications.
...
PMID:Immunosuppressive drugs and their effects. 801 74

The introduction of new techniques for the determination of renal parenchymal oxygenation and intrarenal microcirculation has elucidated some important aspects in the pathophysiology of acute renal failure (ARF). Data accumulated over the last decade with these techniques, together with improved morphologic evaluation of the kidney, indicate that medullary damage may play a pivotal role in various forms of acute and chronic renal hypoxic and toxic insults. The outer medulla functions normally under hypoxic conditions, as a result of limited regional oxygen supply and high oxygen consumption for urinary concentration. Outer medullary oxygenation is critically balanced by mechanisms designed to adjust oxygen demand and supply, and their insufficiency may lead to ARF with hypoxic medullary damage. In this article, we outline our current concept of the physiologic control of medullary oxygenation and review the clinical conditions that predispose to hypoxic medullary damage, including rhabdomyolysis, hypercalcemia, or the exposure to endotoxin, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, radiologic contrast agents, cyclosporine, FK506, and amphothericin. We shall indicate a possible role for medullary oxygen insufficiency in clinical conditions known to predispose to ARF, such as preexisting renal disease, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, atherosclerosis, effective volume depletion, urinary obstruction, or aging, and suggest potential strategies to preserve medullary oxygenation and integrity.
...
PMID:The role of medullary ischemia in acute renal failure. 857 90

Between May 1, 1993 and April 5, 1995, 154 pancreas allograft recipients at 9 institutions were given FK506 posttransplant. Three groups were studied: (1) recipients given FK506 initially for induction and maintenance therapy (n = 82), (2) recipients switched to FK506 for antirejection or rescue therapy (n = 61), and (3) recipients converted to FK506 for other reasons (n = 11). Of 82 patients in the induction group, 7 (9%) had simultaneous bone marrow (BM) and pancreas-kidney (SPK-BM) transplants, 54 (66%) had SPK transplants without BM, 14 (17%) had pancreas transplants alone (PTA), and 7 (9%) had pancreas after previous kidney transplants (PAK). All but 1 recipient was given quadruple immunosuppression (anti-T cell agents plus azathioprine and prednisone) for induction. The median FK506 starting dose was 4 mg/day p.o.; the median average FK506 blood level, 12 ng/ml. The most common side effects were neurotoxicity (16%), nephrotoxicity (13%), and gastrointestinal toxicity (9%). New-onset diabetes mellitus requiring permanent insulin therapy did not occur. Of 61 transplants in the rescue group, 44 (72%) were SPK, 11 (18%) PTA, and 6 (10%) PAK. All but 3 (95%) of the recipients had been on cyclosporine-azathioprine-prednisone triple immunosuppression before substitution of FK506 for cyclosporine; 46% of the recipients had one, and 54% > or = 2, rejection episodes preconversion. The most common side effects were nephrotoxicity (25%), neurotoxicity (23%), and gastrointestinal toxicity (21%). Two recipients were reconverted to cyclosporine because of transient hyperglycemia, and one recipient is on insulin. In the induction group, patient survival at 6 months was 90% for SPK, 100% for PTA, and 100% for PAK. According to a matched-pair analysis, pancreas graft survival for SPK recipients at 6 months was 87% for FK506 versus 70% for cyclosporine recipients (P = 0.04); for PTA recipients, 84% versus 66% (P = n.s.); and for PAK recipients, 80% versus 14% (P = 0.11). When technical failures and death with functioning grafts were censored, pancreas graft survival remained significantly better in the FK506 group. The incidence of first reversible rejection episodes by 6 months in FK506 recipients was 35% for SPK, 40% for PTA, and 20% for PAK. Of 75 pancreas grafts, 64 are currently functioning; in 5 recipients the pancreas failed (1 from rejection); 6 recipients died with a functioning pancreas graft. There were 3 posttransplant lymphomas (all EBV-positive); 2 recipients died and 1 is alive after subtotal colectomy and transplant pancreatectomy. In the antirejection rescue group, patient survival rates at 6 months were 91% for SPK, 100% for PTA, and 80% for PAK (P = n.s.). Pancreas graft survival rates at 6 months were 90% for SPK, 72% for PTA, and 40% for PAK. The incidence of first reversible rejection episodes after conversion to FK506 at 6 months was 44% in SPK, 54% in PTA, and 50% in PAK. Of 61 pancreas grafts, 51 are currently functioning; in 7 recipients the pancreas failed (5 from rejection); 3 recipients died with a functioning graft. There were no posttransplant lymphomas in the rescue group. This multicenter survey shows that FK506 in pancreas transplantation is associated with (1) a low rate of graft loss from rejection when used for induction therapy, (2) a high rate of graft salvage when used for rescue or rejection therapy, and (3) a very low rate of new-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. These encouraging results are tarnished by 3 posttransplant lymphomas in the induction group; a possible explanation is overimmunosuppression, but further (randomized) studies are necessary to analyze the long-term risk-benefit ratio of FK506 after pancreas transplantation.
...
PMID:A multicenter analysis of the first experience with FK506 for induction and rescue therapy after pancreas transplantation. 860 Jun 35

Three cases of insulin-requiring diabetes mellitus associated with tacrolimus (FK506) therapy in pediatric renal transplant patients are presented. New-onset diabetes mellitus has been reported with tacrolimus therapy post liver and kidney transplants in up to 12% of adult patients, but is thought to be rare in pediatrics. Although insulin requirement with tacrolimus therapy has been occasionally reported in adolescent patients post liver transplant, only a single case in a pediatric kidney transplant recipient has been previously documented. These cases illustrate the significant diabetogenic effect of tacrolimus in pediatric renal transplant patients. As the use of tacrolimus becomes more prevalent in pediatric kidney transplantation, pediatric nephrologists should be aware of this potential complication.
...
PMID:Diabetes as a complication of tacrolimus (FK506) in pediatric renal transplant patients. 861 59

Cyclosporine (CsA) and FK506 are structurally unrelated immunosuppressants, but function in similar ways. FK506 and rapamycin (RAPA), on the other hand, have structural similarities, but act by different mechanisms to yield immunosuppression. Besides their immunosuppressive action, CsA and FK506 are known to interfere with T-cell development. CsA treatment after lethal X-irradiation and syngeneic bone marrow transplantation results in autoimmune disease, which is referred to as CsA-induced autoimmunity. In this study, we examined the effect of RAPA on T-cell development by flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry in female Lewis and Brown Norway rats. Irradiation and syngeneic bone marrow transplantation were performed before a 4-week course of RAPA administration to determine de novo T-cell development in relation to possible autoimmune phenomena. RAPA interfered with the maturation of thymocytes to the CD4+CD8+ DP stage, which resulted in a relative increase in TCRalphabeta(-) immature thymocytes, localized in a rim along the outer cortex. The thymus of RAPA-treated animals had a thinner cortex, leading to stronger thymic atrophy. In the periphery, only a few T cells were observed at the end of RAPA treatment. In the Lewis rat, a normal CD4/CD8 T-cell ratio and an increased Th1/Th2 ratio was observed within the T-cell population. Six weeks after cessation of RAPA therapy, the T-cell compartment was restored to normal, with respect to number and phenotype. In Brown Norway rats, however, T-cell areas were barely detectable at the end of RAPA treatment. The CD4/CD8 T-cell ratio was decreased as a result of a lower number of CD4 T cells; the Th1/Th2 ratio was increased but Th2 remained higher. Similar to Lewis rats, the situation was almost normalized 6 weeks after cessation of RAPA administration. However, Brown Norway rats, in contrast to Lewis rats, showed T-cell infiltration and concomitant induction of MHC class II in the submandibular salivary gland, as well as insulitis, in the pancreas. Possible relationships to Sjogren's disease and diabetes remain to be established.
...
PMID:Effect of in vivo rapamycin treatment on de novo T-cell development in relation to induction of autoimmune-like immunopathology in the rat. 887 95

FK506 (tacrolimus) is an immunosuppressive drug which interrupts Ca2+-calmodulin-calcineurin signaling pathways in T lymphocytes, thereby blocking antigen activation of T cell early activation genes. Regulation of insulin gene expression in the beta cell may also involve Ca2+-signaling pathways and FK506 has been associated with insulin-requiring diabetes mellitus during clinical use. The purpose of this study was to characterize the effects of FK506 on human insulin gene transcription, insulin mRNA levels, and insulin secretion using as a model the HIT-T15 beta cell line. FK506 had no acute effect on insulin secretion in the HIT cell, but caused a reversible time- and dose-dependent (10(-9)-10(-6) M) decrease in HIT cell insulin secretion. Decreased insulin secretion in the presence of FK506 was also accompanied by a dose-dependent decrease in HIT cell insulin content, insulin mRNA levels, and expression of a human insulin promoter-chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) reporter gene. FK506 decreased HIT cell expression of the human insulin promoter-CAT reporter gene by 40% in the presence of both low (0.4 mM) at high (20 mM) glucose concentrations. Western blot analysis of HIT cell proteins gave evidence for the presence of calcineurin in the HIT cell. These findings suggest that FK506 may have direct effects to reversibly inhibit insulin gene transcription, leading to a decline in insulin mRNA levels, insulin synthesis, and ultimately insulin secretion.
...
PMID:Effects of tacrolimus (FK506) on human insulin gene expression, insulin mRNA levels, and insulin secretion in HIT-T15 cells. 898 25

Leflunomide (Lef) is a novel immunosuppressant that can prevent islet allograft and xenograft rejection. In this study, we investigated the in vivo effects of Lef on the function of normal pancreatic islets and syngeneic islet grafts in rats and compared its effect to cyclosporine (CsA) and FK506. Different groups of rats were treated with Lef (10 and 20 mg/kg/day), CsA (20 mg/kg/day), or FK506 (2 mg/kg/day). After 4 and 6 weeks, nonfasting blood glucose (BG) levels of all the treatment groups were not different from that of the control group. Intravenous glucose tolerance test revealed that the rate of glucose disappearance was normal in Lef-treated groups. However, the rate of glucose disappearance in the CsA- and FK506-treated rats was impaired. In contrast, long-term (7 months) treatment of rats with CsA (10 mg/kg/day) resulted in five of seven rats developing hyperglycemia. However, normal BG was observed in all rats treated for 7 months with Lef (10 mg/kg/day). In the second experimental model, streptozocin-induced diabetic ACI rats were grafted with an average of 1200 syngeneic islets into the liver or kidney capsule. Diabetes in these ACI recipients was stably reversed for 6 months, then these rats were treated with Lef (20 mg/kg/day), CsA (20 mg/kg/day), and FK506 (2 mg/kg/day). After 14 days of treatment, nonfasting BG levels were significantly increased in rats treated with CsA (before: 105 +/- 2.9 mg/ dl, after: 275.8 +/- 60 mg/dl) as well as in rats treated with FK506 (before: 108 +/- 2.4 mg/dl, after: 209 +/- 10.1 mg/dl). In contrast, the BG levels of the Lef-treated rats were indistinguishable from those of the untreated control groups. Site of transplantation, i.e., liver and kidney, did not affect the results. Our results indicating that Lef has no diabetogenic property in vivo lends support to the promise that leflunomide may be effective for clinical islet transplantation.
...
PMID:In vivo effects of leflunomide on normal pancreatic islet and syngeneic islet graft function. 907 44

FK506 a new and potent immunosuppressive agent has been shown to be effective in prolonging pancreatic islet allograft survival. The present study was to determine its efficacy in prolonging pig islet xenotransplantation in two different strains of rat recipients. A total of two dosages of FK506 at 1 or 2 mg/kg per day for 2 weeks and then at weekly intervals were tested as monotherapy for their effect on the survival of renal subcapsular xenografts of purified or impure adult pig islets in inbred ACI and outbred Wistar rats. Histological assessment indicated that FK506 at 2 mg/kg per day significantly prolonged purified pig islet xenograft survival and to 7.5 months in two of three ACI recipients. Monotherapy with a lower dosage of FK506 or transplantation with impure pig islets resulted in increased graft survival time over controls, but less than that with the 2 mg/kg per day FK506. The viable pig islet xenografts showed a normal appearance and were readily identified by immunohistochemical staining for insulin and glucagon and further confirmed by immunohistochemical staining with anti-pig islet specific monoclonal antibody clone P44, developed in our laboratory. Mononuclear cell infiltration, mainly of the CD8-positive T-cell subset, increased with the duration of the graft in the recipient. By 7.5 months the majority of the xenografted islet cells were enclosed by the cellular infiltrate. The in vitro perfusion study of pig islets that had survived for 1 or 2 months in vivo showed that they were responsive to glucose stimulation with increase in insulin secretion into the perfusate. The results demonstrated that FK506 significantly prolonged pig islet survival in two rat strains and suggested that it is an effective immunosuppressant for the xenotransplantation model.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract 1997 Sep
PMID:Prolongation of pig islet xenograft survival in rats immunosuppressed with FK506. 930 35


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next >>