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)

The effect of 17 beta-estradiol (E2) on growth of GH4C1 rat pituitary tumor cells was investigated under serum-free conditions and with medium containing charcoal-extracted serum. Serum-free TRM-1 medium was a 1:1 (vol/vol) mixture of F12-DME supplemented with 50 micrograms/ml gentamicin, 15 mM 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid, 10 micrograms/ml insulin, 10 micrograms/ml transferrin, 10 ng/ml selenous acid, 10 nM 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine (T3), 50 microM ethanolamine, and 500 micrograms/ml bovine serum albumin. The cells grew continuously in TRM-1 but were E2 responsive only when growth was retarded by reducing the T3 concentration to 10 pM (TRM-MOD). Addition of 1 to 10 nM E2 to TRM-MOD increased growth by 0.3 to 0.9 cell population doublings over controls in 9 d. By using medium supplemented with charcoal-extracted sera, basal growth became 1 to 1.5 cell population doublings in 9 d. Addition of 0.1 pM E2 to medium containing charcoal-extracted serum caused a significant increase in cell number whereas pM-nM concentrations stimulated 200 to 570% increases over controls. The effect of steroid hormone was the same in phenol-red-containing and indicator-free medium. The data presented confirm that the major requirements for demonstration of estrogenic effects in culture were optimum concentrations of thyroid hormones and the presence of yet-to-be-characterized serum factors.
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PMID:Rat pituitary tumor cells in serum-free culture. II. Serum factor and thyroid hormone requirements for estrogen-responsive growth. 292 Dec 32

The aim of the study was to investigate whether inhibition of gastric emptying of meals plays a role in the mechanism of the blood glucose-lowering action of glucagon-like peptide-1-(7-36) amide [GLP-1-(7-36) amide] in type 2 diabetes. Eight poorly controlled type 2 diabetic patients (age, 58 +/- 6 yr; body mass index, 30.0 +/- 5.2 kg/m2; hemoglobin A1c, 10.5 +/- 1.2%) were studied in the fasting state (plasma glucose, 11.1 +/- 1.1 mmol/L). A liquid meal of 400 mL containing 8% amino acids and 50 g sucrose (327 Kcal) was administered at time zero by a nasogastric tube. Gastric volume was determined by a dye dilution technique using phenol red. In randomized order, GLP-1-(7-36) amide (1.2 pmol/kg.min; Saxon Biochemicals) or placebo (0.9% NaCl with 1% human serum albumin) was infused between -30 and 240 min. In the control experiment, gastric emptying was completed within 120 min, and plasma glucose, insulin, C-peptide, GLP-1-(7-36) amide, and glucagon concentrations transiently increased. With exogenous GLP-1-(7-36) amide (plasma level, approximately 70 pmol/L), gastric volume remained constant over the period it was measured (120 min; P < 0.0001 vs. placebo), and plasma glucose fell to normal fasting values (5.4 +/- 0.7 mmol/L) within 3-4 h, whereas insulin was stimulated in most, but not all, patients, and glucagon remained at the basal level or was slightly suppressed. In conclusion, GLP-1-(7-36) amide inhibits gastric emptying in type 2 diabetic patients. Together with the stimulation of insulin and the inhibition of glucagon secretion, this effect probably contributes to the blood glucose-lowering action of GLP-1-(7-36) amide in type 2-diabetic patients when studied after meal ingestion. At the degree observed, inhibition of gastric emptying, however, must be overcome by tachyphylaxis, reduction in dose, or pharmacological interventions so as not to interfere with the therapeutic use of GLP-1-(7-36) amide in type 2 diabetic patients.
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PMID:Gastric emptying, glucose responses, and insulin secretion after a liquid test meal: effects of exogenous glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1)-(7-36) amide in type 2 (noninsulin-dependent) diabetic patients. 855 Jul 73

Intravenous glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-1 [7-36 amide] can normalize plasma glucose in non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) patients. Since this is no form for routine therapeutic administration, effects of subcutaneous GLP-1 at a high dose (1.5 nmol/kg body weight) were examined. Three groups of 8, 9 and 7 patients (61 +/- 7, 61 +/- 9, 50 +/- 11 years; BMI 29.5 +/- 2.5, 26.1 +/- 2.3, 28.0 +/- 4.2 kg/m2; HbA1c 11.3 +/- 1.5, 9.9 +/- 1.0, 10.6 +/- 0.7%) were examined: after a single subcutaneous injection of 1.5 nmol/kg GLP [7-36 amide]; after repeated subcutaneous injections (0 and 120 min) in fasting patients; after a single, subcutaneous injection 30 min before a liquid test meal (amino acids 8%, and sucrose 50 g in 400 ml), all compared with a placebo. Glucose (glucose oxidase), insulin, C-peptide, GLP-1 and glucagon (specific immunoassays) were measured. Gastric emptying was assessed with the indicator-dilution method and phenol red. Repeated measures ANOVA was used for statistical analysis. GLP-1 injection led to a short-lived increment in GLP-1 concentrations (peak at 30-60 min, then return to basal levels after 90-120 min). Each GLP-1 injection stimulated insulin (insulin, C-peptide, p < 0.0001, respectively) and inhibited glucagon secretion (p < 0.0001). In fasting patients the repeated administration of GLP-1 normalized plasma glucose (5.8 +/- 0.4 mmol/l after 240 min vs 8.2 +/- 0.7 mmol/l after a single dose, p = 0.0065). With the meal, subcutaneous GLP-1 led to a complete cessation of gastric emptying for 30-45 min (p < 0.0001 statistically different from placebo) followed by emptying at a normal rate. As a consequence, integrated incremental glucose responses were reduced by 40% (p = 0.051). In conclusion, subcutaneous GLP-1 [7-36 amide] has similar effects in NIDDM patients as an intravenous infusion. Preparations with retarded release of GLP-1 would appear more suitable for therapeutic purposes because elevation of GLP-1 concentrations for 4 rather than 2 h (repeated doses) normalized fasting plasma glucose better. In the short term, there appears to be no tachyphylaxis, since insulin stimulation and glucagon suppression were similar upon repeated administrations of GLP-1 [7-36 amide]. It may be easier to influence fasting hyperglycaemia by GLP-1 than to reduce meal-related increments in glycaemia.
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PMID:Effects of subcutaneous glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1 [7-36 amide]) in patients with NIDDM. 896 Aug 41

Chlorogenic acid derivatives were recently identified as novel, potent, and specific inhibitors of the hepatic glucose 6-phosphate translocase. Inhibition of the glucose 6-phosphate translocase leads to a decrease in hepatic glucose production, rendering chlorogenic acid derivatives as potential novel therapeutics in patients with type 2 diabetes. The present study examines the hepatic uptake mechanism of the radiolabeled chlorogenic acid derivative S 1743 into freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. Initial uptake rates were Na(+)-independent and followed saturation kinetics with no superimposition of facilitated diffusion. Inhibition studies demonstrated that other chlorogenic acid derivatives inhibited uptake of the radiolabeled compound S 1743 into rat hepatocytes in the range of 1.1 to 11 microM, whereas the natural chlorogenic acid (up to 100 microM) had no effect at all. In addition, inhibition of S 1743 uptake into rat hepatocytes was found in the presence of sulfobromophthalein, sulfolithocholyltaurine, estrone-3-sulfate, cholyltaurine, verapamil, bumetanide, probenecide, phenol red, digoxin, and ouabain (in decreasing order) but not with N-methylnicotinamide, alpha-ketoglutarate, p-aminohippurate, geneticin sulfate, and 5-sulfosalicylate. The observed inhibition pattern suggested that members of the family of the organic anion transporting polypeptides (Oatps) could be involved in hepatic uptake of chlorogenic acid derivatives. Indeed, S 1743 uptake could be demonstrated in Oatp1- and Oatp2-expressing Xenopus laevis oocytes as well as in Oatp1-expressing Chinese hamster ovary cells. A comparison of the inhibition pattern obtained in hepatocytes compared with that obtained in Oatp1-expressing Chinese hamster ovary cells suggests that facilitated uptake by Oatp1 is a major contributor in total hepatic uptake of chlorogenic acid derivatives.
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PMID:Hepatic uptake of synthetic chlorogenic acid derivatives by the organic anion transport proteins. 1112 67

The polypeptide hormone amylin forms amyloid deposits in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Amyloid-forming peptides are often very difficult to synthesize and purify. Amylin and fragments of amylin are no exception. In this paper we describe the efficient synthesis and purification of two amyloidogenic fragments of human amylin. One fragment corresponds to residues 17 to 37 of the full-length hormone and the other corresponds to residues 24 to 37. These fragments have previously been identified in vivo and have been shown to form amyloid in vitro. The strategy used to elucidate appropriate conditions for the synthesis and purification of these peptides is generally applicable to other peptides that are difficult to synthesize. These peptides were prepared using solid-phase peptide synthesis with Fmoc alpha-amino protection. The effects of varying the solvent, side-chain-protecting group and choice of cleavage conditions were examined. The use of NMP as the main solvent and cleavage with trifluoroacetic acid, phenol, ethanedithiol, thioanisole, and water proved to be optimal. 1,1,1,3, 3,3-Hexafluoro-2-propanol (HFIP) was found to be the best solvent for solubilizing the crude peptides. A wide range of HPLC conditions for the purification of the peptides were examined and an acetonitrile-based solvent system with HCl as the ion pairing agent provided efficient purification.
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PMID:Synthesis and purification of amyloidogenic peptides. 1114 8

Momordica charantia (MC) fruit was subjected to phytochemical and pharmacological interaction studies with oral hypoglycemis in NIDDM patients. Phytochemical, chromatographical analysis and extraction of methanolic MC fruit soft (semi-solid form) in CCl4 + C6H6 solvent system yielded 15 diverse chemical constituents--alkaloids, glycosides, aglycone, tannin, sterol, phenol and protein. The CCl4 + C6H6 MC soft extract was used orally in a dose of 200 mg twice daily (BD) for pharmacological interactions with two diversely acting oral hypoglycemic agents--1) metformin BD and 2) glibenclamide BD in 15 patients of either sex (52-65 years of age) of NIDDM. It was observed that with CCl4 + C6H6 MC soft extract plus half doses of metformin or glibenclamide or both in combination caused hypoglycemia greater than that caused by full doses used in the study with 7 days treatment. Conclusively the extract acts in synergism with oral hypoglycemics and potentiates their hypoglycemia in NIDDM.
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PMID:Phytochemical determination and extraction of Momordica charantia fruit and its hypoglycemic potentiation of oral hypoglycemic drugs in diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). 1552 66

The formation of amyloid fibril is associated with major human diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, prion diseases, and type 2 diabetes. Methods for efficient inhibition of amyloid fibril formation are therefore highly clinically important. A principal approach for the inhibition of amyloid formation is based on the use of modified molecular recognition elements. Here, we demonstrate efficient inhibition of amyloid formation of the type 2 diabetes-related human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) by a modified aromatic peptide fragment and a small aromatic polyphenol molecule. A molecular recognition assay using peptide array analysis suggested that molecular recognition between hIAPP and its core amyloidogenic module is mediated by aromatic rather than hydrophobic interactions. To study the possible effect of aromatic interactions on inhibition of hIAPP fibril formation, we have used peptide and small molecule inhibitors. The addition of a nonamyloidogenic peptide analogue of the core module NFGAILSS, in which phenylalanine was substituted with tyrosine (NYGAILSS), resulted in substantial inhibition of fibril formation by hIAPP. The inhibition was significantly stronger than the one achieved using a beta-sheet breaker-conjugated peptide NFGAILPP. On the basis of the molecular arrangement of the tyrosine-phenylalanine interaction, we suggest that the inhibition stems from the geometrical constrains of the heteroaromatic benzene-phenol interaction. In line with this notion, we demonstrate remarkable inhibition of hIAPP fibril formation and cytotoxicity toward pancreatic beta-cells by a small polyphenol molecule, the nontoxic phenol red compound. Taken together, our results provide further experimental support for the potential role of aromatic interactions in amyloid formation and establish a novel approach for its inhibition.
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PMID:Inhibition of islet amyloid polypeptide fibril formation: a potential role for heteroaromatic interactions. 1553 50

Hyperglycemia frequently continues to worsen even after the diagnosis of overt diabetes. The aim of this study is to evaluate the factors contributing to increasing glucose intolerance after onset of type 2 diabetes in Japanese subjects. Five hundred fifty newly diagnosed type 2 diabetic patients were classified into 3 degrees of hyperglycemia based on plasma glucose levels estimated by 75-g oral glucose tolerance test: diabetes mellitus with isolated fasting hyperglycemia (DM/IFH), DM with isolated postchallenge hyperglycemia (DM/IPH), and DM with fasting and postchallenge hyperglycemia (DM/FPH). In addition, the DM/IFH and DM/IPH groups were subdivided to clarify the determinants of fasting and postchallenge hyperglycemia. Insulin secretion was evaluated by insulinogenic index, and insulin sensitivity was evaluated by composite index of insulin sensitivity (ISI composite). The insulinogenic index in DM/IFH was highest of the 3 groups (P < .0001). The insulinogenic index in DM/IPH was higher than in DM/FPH (P < .0001). The international sensitivity index composite in DM/IPH was highest of the 3 groups (P < .05). Although impaired early-phase insulin secretion plays the crucial role in deterioration from DM/IFH to DM/FPH in Japanese subjects, impaired early-phase insulin secretion and decreased insulin sensitivity both are factors in deterioration from DM/IPH to DM/FPH. In addition, comparison of subgroups of DM/IFH and DM/IPH shows that although decreased early-phase insulin secretion plays the more significant role in postchallenge hyperglycemia in Japanese subjects, insulin sensitivity is the more important factor in fasting hyperglycemia.
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PMID:Factors responsible for deteriorating glucose tolerance in newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes in Japanese men. 1632 19

Oxidative stress is implicated in atherogenesis, yet most clinical trials with antioxidants, particularly vitamin E, have failed to protect against atherosclerotic diseases. A striking exception is probucol, which retards atherosclerosis in carotid arteries and restenosis of coronary arteries after angioplasty. Because probucol has in vitro cellular-protective effects independent of inhibiting lipid oxidation, we investigated the mode of action of probucol in vivo. We used three models of vascular disease: apolipoprotein E-deficient mice, a model of atherosclerosis; rabbit aortic balloon injury, a model of restenosis; and carotid injury in obese Zucker rats, a model of type 2 diabetes. Unexpectedly, we observed that the phenol moieties of probucol were insufficient, whereas its sulphur atoms were required for protection. Probucol and its sulphur-containing metabolite, but not a sulphur-free phenolic analogue, protected via cell-specific effects on inhibiting macrophage accumulation, stimulating reendothelialization, and inhibiting vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation. These processes were mediated via induction of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), an activity not shared by vitamin E. Our findings identify HO-1 as the molecular target of probucol. They indicate 2-electron rather than radical (1-electron) oxidants as important contributors to atherogenesis, and point to novel lead compounds for therapeutic intervention against atherosclerotic diseases.
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PMID:Antioxidants protect from atherosclerosis by a heme oxygenase-1 pathway that is independent of free radical scavenging. 1660 77

Amyloid-associated diseases affect millions of people worldwide. Phenol red exhibits modest inhibition toward fibril formation of human Islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) and its toxicity, which is associated with type II diabetes mellitus. However, the molecular level mechanisms of interactions remain elusive. The binding of phenol red molecules to the protofibrils of an amyloidogenic fragment (NFGAIL) of hIAPP has been investigated by molecular dynamics simulations with explicit solvent. The phenol red molecules were observed to bind primarily along either beta-sheet stacking or beta-strand directions. Through its three aromatic rings, the phenol red molecule preferentially interacted with the hydrophobic side chains of Phe, Leu, and Ile; and the polar sulfone and hydroxyl groups were mainly exposed in solvent. Thus, phenol red improves the solubility of the early protofibrils and represses further growth. Interestingly, there was no obvious preference toward the aromatic Phe residue in comparison to the hydrophobic Leu or Ile residues. The lack of binding along the hydrogen bond direction indicates that phenol red does not directly block the beta-sheet extension. Further free energy analysis suggested that a phenol red analog may potentially improve the binding affinity.
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PMID:Phenol red interacts with the protofibril-like oligomers of an amyloidogenic hexapeptide NFGAIL through both hydrophobic and aromatic contacts. 1693 48


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