Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (type 2 diabetes)
57,723 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glucagon-like peptide-I(GLP-I), encoded by the glucagon gene and released from the gut in response to nutrients, is a potent stimulator of glucose-induced insulin secretion. In human subjects GLP-I exerts its physiological effect as an incretin. The incretin effect of GLP-I is preserved in patients with Type II diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), suggesting that GLP-I receptor agonist can be used therapeutically in this group of patients. In these studies we addressed the question of whether GLP-I has broader actions in human physiology. To investigate this issue we examined the tissue distribution of GLP-I receptor using RNAse protection assay in order to avoid the cross-reactivities with structurally related receptors and to increase the sensitivity of detection. The riboprobe was synthesized from the human pancreatic GLP-I receptor cDNA and used in hybridization experiments with total RNA isolated from different human tissues. In addition to the pancreas, we found expression of GLP-I receptor mRNA in lung, brain, kidney, stomach and heart. Peripheral tissues which are the major sites of glucose turnover, such as liver, skeletal muscle and adipose did not express the pancreatic form of the GLP-I receptor. We also cloned and sequenced GLP-I receptor cDNA from human brain and heart. The deduced amino acid sequences are the same as the sequence found in the pancreas. These results indicate that GLP-I might have effects beyond the pancreas, including the cardiovascular and central nervous systems where a receptor with the same ligand binding specificity is found.
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PMID:Tissue-specific expression of the human receptor for glucagon-like peptide-I: brain, heart and pancreatic forms have the same deduced amino acid sequences. 784 4

Potentiation of glucose-induced insulin secretion by intestinal factors has been described for many years. Today, two major peptides with potent insulinotropic action have been recognized: gastric inhibitory peptide and truncated forms of glucagon-like peptide I, GLP-I(7-37) or the related GLP-I(7-36)amide. These hormones have specific beta-cell receptors that are coupled to production of cAMP and activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Elevation in intracellular cAMP levels is required to mediate the glucoincretin effect of these hormones: the potentiation of insulin secretion in the presence of stimulatory concentrations of glucose. In addition, circulating glucoincretins maintain basal levels of cAMP, which are necessary to keep beta-cells in a glucose-competent state. Interactions between glucoincretin signaling and glucose-induced insulin secretion may result from the phosphorylation of key elements of the glucose signaling pathway by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. These include the ATP-dependent K+ channel, the Ca++ channel, or elements of the secretory machinery itself. In NIDDM, the glucoincretin effect is reduced. However, basal or stimulated gastric inhibitory peptide and glucagon-like peptide I levels are normal or even elevated, suggesting that signals induced by these hormones on the beta-cells are probably altered. At pharmacological doses, infusion of glucagon-like peptide I but not gastric inhibitory peptide, can ameliorate postprandial insulin secretory response in NIDDM patients. Agonists of the glucagon-like peptide I receptor have been proposed as new therapeutic agents in NIDDM.
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PMID:Glucagon-like peptide-I and the control of insulin secretion in the normal state and in NIDDM. 834 31

Gastric inhibitory polypeptide (tGIP) and truncated glucagon like peptide-1 (GLP-1) are potent gastrointestinal insulinotropic factors (incretin), are most released after a meal or ingestion of glucose in man and animals. To investigate whether sulfonylurea (SU) affects the secretion of incretin, the modulation of plasma GIP and tGLP-1 levels following glucose ingestion in non-insulin-dependent diabetic type 2 patients with or without SU therapy was studied. A 75-G oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was carried out on 9 healthy subjects (controls) and 18 patients with non-obese type 2, 9 of whom were treated by diet alone (NIDDM-diet) and the other 9 with SU (glibenclamide 2.5 mg or gliclazide 40 mg) once a day (NIDDM-SU). Plasma GIP was measured by radioimmunoassay (RIA) with R65 antibody, and GLP-1 was measured by RIA with N-terminal-directed antiserum R1043 (GLP-1NT) and C-terminal-directed antiserum R2337 (GLP-1CT). Following OGTT, plasma glucose, GIP, GLP-1NT, and GLP-1CT in type 2 patients increased more markedly than in controls, despite the lower response of insulin. However, there were no significant differences in plasma levels of these peptides between the NIDDM-diet and NIDDM-SU groups. Therefore, it is unlikely that SU is involved in the high response of GIP and GLP-1s to OGTT in type 2 patients.
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PMID:Response of truncated glucagon-like peptide-1 and gastric inhibitory polypeptide to glucose ingestion in non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. Effect of sulfonylurea therapy. 859 Jul 85

To search if biological effects of GLP-I on glucose metabolism in extrapancreatic tissue are present in diabetic states, we have studied the action of GLP-I and insulin on glycogen-enzyme activity, glycogen synthesis, and glucose metabolism in isolated hepatocytes and soleus muscle from adult streptozotocin (STZ)- and neonatal STZ-treated diabetic rats. This work confirms the previously reported insulin-like effects of GLP-I on glucose metabolism in both muscle and liver tissue from normal rats (control). The present study extends those observations to the muscle and liver tissue of diabetic animals. In both muscle and liver tissue, the metabolism of D-glucose, in the absence of added peptides, was more severely affected in adult STZ (IDDM model) than in neonatal STZ (nSTZ; NIDDM model) rats, and the magnitude of hormonal effect on metabolic variables was lower in diabetic rats than in control rats, as a rule. Nevertheless, in liver and muscle tissue of diabetic rats, GLP-I was able to increase glycogen synthase activity, augment the net rate of D-[U-14C]glucose incorporation into glycogen, and increase D-[5-3H]glucose utilization, D-[U-14C]glucose oxidation, and lactate production. In conclusion, GLP-I exerts insulin-like effects on D-glucose metabolism in both muscle and liver tissue in IDDM or NIDDM animal models, and present observations reinforce the view that GLP-I may represent a most promising tool in the treatment of diabetic patients.
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PMID:Preserved GLP-I effects on glycogen synthase a activity and glucose metabolism in isolated hepatocytes and skeletal muscle from diabetic rats. 923 49

The incretin effect is reduced in NIDDM, although a corresponding attenuation of incretin hormone secretion does not occur. We characterized the direct interaction of GLP-I, an important incretin hormone, and leptin on insulin secretion and signal transduction in B-cells. Leptin inhibited GLP-I stimulated insulin release from the isolated perfused rat pancreas. Both phases of the biphasic insulin secretory response were inhibited. GLP-I receptor binding and GLP-I induced cAMP generation remained unchanged. Leptin reduced the GLP-I mediated increase of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration. It had similar effects on calcium elevations induced by forskolin. The effect was more pronounced during the plateau phase than during the initial peak. These effects could help to explain leptin's inhibitory effects on insulin secretion. The inhibition of GLP-I's insulinotropic effects by leptin may be an interesting aspect in the pathophysiology of NIDDM. The existence of an "adipo-insular axis" is suggested, in which leptin represents a negative feed-back signal from the adipose tissue to the endocrine pancreas.
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PMID:Interaction of GLP-I and leptin at rat pancreatic B-cells: effects on insulin secretion and signal transduction. 947 58

The incretins glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP1-42) and truncated forms of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) are hormones released from the gut in response to ingested nutrients, which act on the pancreas to potentiate glucose-induced insulin secretion. These hormones are rapidly inactivated by the circulating enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase IV ([DPIV] CD26). This study describes the effect on glucose tolerance and insulin secretion of inhibiting endogenous DPIV in the rat using Ile-thiazolidide, a specific DPIV inhibitor. High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis of plasma following in vivo administration of 125I-labeled peptides showed that inhibition of DPIV by about 70% prevented the degradation of 90.0% of injected 125I-GLP-17-36 after 5 minutes, while only 13.4% remained unhydrolyzed in rats not treated with the DPIV-inhibiting agent after only 2 minutes. Ile-thiazolidide treatment also increased the circulating half-life of intact GLP-17-36 released in response to intraduodenal (ID) glucose (as measured by N-terminal specific radioimmunoassay [RIA]). In addition, inhibition of DPIV in vivo resulted in an earlier increase and peak of plasma insulin and a more rapid clearance of blood glucose in response to ID glucose challenge. When considered with the HPLC data, these results suggest that the altered insulin profile is an incretin-mediated response. DPIV inhibition resulting in improved glucose tolerance may have therapeutic potential for the management of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Improved glucose tolerance in rats treated with the dipeptidyl peptidase IV (CD26) inhibitor Ile-thiazolidide. 1009 18

Diabetes is a disease of increasing prevalence in the general population and of unknown cause. Diabetes is manifested as hyperglycemia due to a relative deficiency of the production of insulin by the pancreatic beta-cells. One determinant in the development of diabetes is an inadequate mass of beta-cells, either absolute (type 1, juvenile diabetes) or relative (type 2, maturity-onset diabetes). Earlier, we reported that the intestinal hormone glucagon-like peptide I (GLP-I) effectively augments glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Here we report that exendin-4, a long-acting GLP-I agonist, stimulates both the differentiation of beta-cells from ductal progenitor cells (neogenesis) and proliferation of beta-cells when administered to rats. In a partial pancreatectomy rat model of type 2 diabetes, the daily administration of exendin-4 for 10 days post-pancreatectomy attenuates the development of diabetes. We show that exendin-4 stimulates the regeneration of the pancreas and expansion of beta-cell mass by processes of both neogenesis and proliferation of beta-cells. Thus, GLP-I and analogs thereof hold promise as a novel therapy to stimulate beta-cell growth and differentiation when administered to diabetic individuals with reduced beta-cell mass.
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PMID:Exendin-4 stimulates both beta-cell replication and neogenesis, resulting in increased beta-cell mass and improved glucose tolerance in diabetic rats. 1058 Apr 13

Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) stimulates insulin secretion and improves glycemic control in type 2 diabetes. In serum the peptide is degraded by dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV). The resulting short biological half-time limits the therapeutic use of GLP-1. DPP IV requires an intact alpha-amino-group of the N-terminal histidine of GLP-1 in order to perform its enzymatic activity. Therefore, the following GLP- analogues with alterations in the N-terminal position 1 were synthesized: N-methylated- (N-me-GLP-1), alpha-methylated (alpha-me-GLP-1), desamidated- (desamino-GLP-1) and imidazole-lactic-acid substituted GLP-1 (imi-GLP-1). All GLP-1 analogues except alpha-me-GLP-1 were hardly degraded by DPP IV in vitro. The GLP-1 analogues showed receptor affinity and in vitro biological activity comparable to native GLP-1 in RINm5F cells. GLP-1 receptor affinity was highest for imi-GLP-1, followed by alpha-me-GLP-1 and N-me-GLP-1. Only desamino-GLP-1 showed a 15-fold loss of receptor affinity compared to native GLP-1. All analogues stimulated intracellular cAMP production in RINm5F cells in concentrations comparable to GLP-1. N-terminal modifications might therefore be useful in the development of long-acting GLP-1 analogues for type 2 diabetes therapy.
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PMID:GLP-1-analogues resistant to degradation by dipeptidyl-peptidase IV in vitro. 1067 9

A strong genetic component of the beta-cell defect of type 2 diabetes is undisputed. We recently developed a modification of the classic hyperglycemic clamp to assess beta-cell function in response to various stimuli (10 mmol/l glucose, additional glucagon-like peptide [GLP]-1, and arginine). Subjects at risk for developing type 2 diabetes (impaired glucose-tolerant individuals, women with gestational diabetes, and individuals with a family history of type 2 diabetes) clearly showed a significantly decreased mean secretory response to all secretagogues compared with controls. We also showed that normal glucose-tolerant carriers of the Gly972Arg polymorphism in the insulin receptor substrate 1 have significantly reduced insulin secretion in response to glucose and arginine but not to GLP-1. More remarkably, however, the relative impairment of the different secretory phases varied greatly in the same individual, indicating a substantial heterogeneity of beta-cell dysfunction. Specific prominence of this heterogeneity may reflect a specific cellular defect of the beta-cell. In subjects sharing this pattern of heterogeneity, any underlying genetic variant may be enriched and thus more likely not only to be identified but also to be related to a pathophysiological mechanism. In conclusion, we believe that careful clinical characterization of beta-cell function (and dysfunction) is one way of identifying and understanding the genetic factors leading to the insulin secretory failure of type 2 diabetes.
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PMID:Clinical characterization of insulin secretion as the basis for genetic analyses. 1181 70

Obese African-American (AA) subjects have higher resting and stimulated insulin concentrations than obese Caucasians (C), which could not be explained by the severity of obesity or the degree of insulin sensitivity. We investigated whether differences in glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), the most potent incretin that regulates insulin secretion, might explain racial differences in insulin response. Accordingly, we measured fasting and stimulated glucose, insulin, and GLP-1 levels during a 3-h oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) in 26 obese C (age 38+/-2 y, body mass index 44+/-1 kg/m(2)) and 16 obese AA (age 36+/-2 y, BMI 46+/-2 kg/m(2)) subjects. Corrected insulin response (CIR(30)), a measure of beta-cell activity, whole body insulin sensitivity index (WBISI), and area under the curve (AUC) for insulin, GLP-1, and C-peptide/insulin ratio were computed from the OGTT. Glucose levels, fasting and during the OGTT, were similar between racial groups; 32% of the C and 31% of the AA subjects had impaired glucose tolerance. With a similar WBISI, AAs had significantly higher CIR(30) (2.3+/-0.4 vs 1.01+/-0.1), insulin response (IAUC: 23 974+/-4828 vs 14 478+/-1463), and lower insulin clearance (0.07+/-0.01 vs 0.11+/-0.01) than C (all, P<0.01). Obese AAs also had higher fasting GLP-1 (6.7+/-2.5 vs 4.5+/-1.1) and GLP-1AUC (1174.7+/-412 vs 822.4+/-191) than C (both, P<0.02). Our results indicate that obese AAs had higher concentrations of GLP-1 both at fasting and during the OGTT than obese C. The increased GLP-1 concentration could explain the greater insulin concentration and the increased prevalence of hyperinsulinemia-associated disorders including obesity and type 2 diabetes in AAs.
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PMID:Racial differences in glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) concentrations and insulin dynamics during oral glucose tolerance test in obese subjects. 1457 47


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