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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) is one of the major substrates of insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
and mediates various insulin signals downstream. In this study, we have examined the impact of three natural IRS-1 mutations identified in
NIDDM
patients (G971R, P170R, and M209T) on insulin signaling. G971R is located near src homology 2 protein binding sites, and P170R and M209T are located in the phosphotyrosine binding domain of IRS-1. 32D-IR cells, stably overexpressing human insulin receptor, were transfected with wild-type human IRS-1 cDNA (WT) or three mutant IRS-1 cDNAs and analyzed. All the cell lines expressing mutant IRS-1 showed a significant reduction in [3H]thymidine incorporation compared with WT. Upon insulin stimulation, cells expressing G971R showed a 39% decrease (P < 0.005) in phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) activity, a 43% decrease (P < 0.01) in binding of the 85-kDa regulatory subunit of PI 3-kinase, and a 22% decrease (P < 0.05) in mitogen-activated protein kinase activity compared with those expressing WT. Cells expressing P170R and M209T showed slight but significant decreases in PI 3-kinase activity (17 and 14%, respectively; both P < 0.05) and in binding of p85 (22 and 16%, respectively; both P < 0.05) and a greater decrease in mitogen-activated protein kinase activity (41 and 43%, respectively; both P < 0.005) compared with WT. After insulin stimulation, cells expressing P170R and M209T showed significant decreases in IRS-1 phosphorylation (37 and 42%, respectively; both P < 0.05) and in IRS-1 binding to the insulin receptor (48 and 53%, respectively; P < 0.01) compared with WT. G971R showed no changes in IRS-1 phosphorylation and in IRS-1 binding to the insulin receptor compared with WT. These data suggest that the impaired mitogenic response of P170R and M209T was mainly due to reduced binding to the insulin receptor, whereas the impaired response of G971R was mainly due to reduced association with PI 3-kinase p85.
...
PMID:Impact of natural IRS-1 mutations on insulin signals: mutations of IRS-1 in the PTB domain and near SH2 protein binding sites result in impaired function at different steps of IRS-1 signaling. 916 61
To evaluate kinetic defects in insulin action, we performed time-course studies during hyperinsulinemic (120 mU x m(-2) x min(-1)) isoglycemic clamps in seven subjects with
NIDDM
(194 +/- 29 mg/dl) and in seven lean and seven obese nondiabetic subjects. The time course of whole-body glucose disposal rate (GDR), leg glucose uptake (LGU), hepatic glucose output (HGO), and muscle insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
(IRTK) activation were measured. The obese and
NIDDM
subjects had marked delays in activation of GDR (T50 74 +/- 14 and 95 +/- 15 min, respectively, compared with 33 +/- 2 min in lean control subjects), arteriovenous glucose difference (T50 80 +/- 12 and 109 +/- 31 min compared with 30 +/- 3 min) and LGU (T50 89 +/- 25 and 98 +/- 27 min compared with 29 +/- 4 min). All three measurements reached normal levels in the
NIDDM
group after 4-5 h of insulin infusion. Although only a limited number of data points could be obtained from serial muscle biopsies, no delay in the rate of activation of IRTK was apparent in the obese and
NIDDM
groups. In conclusion, 1) in obese and
NIDDM
subjects, insulin-mediated GDR and LGU are delayed to a similar degree; 2) mass action normalizes GDR and LGU in
NIDDM
, but only after several hours of insulin infusion; and 3) The kinetic defect in
NIDDM
and obesity most likely involves intracellular loci distal to activation of the insulin receptor kinase.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of the kinetic defect in insulin action in obesity and NIDDM. 916 71
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha may play a role in the insulin resistance of obesity and
NIDDM
. Troglitazone is a new orally active hypoglycemic agent that has been shown to ameliorate insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia in both diabetic animal models and
NIDDM
subjects. To determine whether this drug could prevent the development of TNF-alpha-induced insulin resistance, glucose turnover was assessed in rats infused with cytokine and pretreated with troglitazone. Normal male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed normal powdered food with or without troglitazone as a food admixture (0.2%). After approximately 10 days, rats were infused with TNF-alpha for 4-5 days, producing a plasma concentration of 632 +/- 30 pg/ml. In vivo insulin action was measured by the euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp technique at a submaximal (24 micromol x kg[-1] x min[-1]) and maximal insulin infusion rate (240 micromol x kg[-1] x min[-1]). TNF-alpha infusion resulted in a pronounced reduction in submaximal insulin-stimulated glucose disposal rate (GDR) (97 +/- 10 vs. 141 +/- 4 micromol x kg[-1] x min[-1], P < 0.05), maximal GDR (175 +/- 8 vs. 267 +/- 6 micromol x kg[-1] x min[-1], P < 0.01), and in insulin receptor-
tyrosine kinase
activity (IR-TKA) (248 +/- 39 vs. 406 +/- 32 fmol ATP/fmol IR, P < 0.05). It also led to a marked increase in basal insulin (90 +/- 24 vs. 48 +/- 6 micromol/l, P < 0.05) and free fatty acid (FFA) concentration (2.56 +/- 0.76 vs. 0.87 +/- 0.13 mmol/l, P < 0.01). Troglitazone treatment completely prevented the TNF-alpha-induced decline in submaximal GDR (133 +/- 16 vs. 141 +/- 4 micromol x kg[-1] x min[-1], NS) and maximal GDR (271 +/- 19 vs. 267 +/- 6 micromol x kg[-1] x min[-1], NS). The hyperlipidemia was partially corrected by troglitazone (1.53 +/- 0.28 vs. 0.87 +/- 0.13 mmol/l, P < 0.05), while IR-TKA and insulin concentration remained unaffected by the drug. Troglitazone restores insulin action possibly by lowering the FFA concentration of the blood and/or by stimulating glucose uptake at an intracellular point distal to insulin receptor autophosphorylation in muscle. If TNF-alpha plays a role in the development of the obesity/
NIDDM
syndrome, troglitazone may prove useful in its treatment.
...
PMID:TNF-alpha-induced insulin resistance in vivo and its prevention by troglitazone. 935 12
Peripheral resistance to insulin is a major component of
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
. Defects in insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
activity have been demonstrated in several tissues from insulin resistant subjects, but mutations in the insulin receptor gene occur in only a small fraction of cases. Therefore, other molecules that are capable of modulating the function of the insulin receptor are likely candidates in the search for the cellular mechanisms of insulin resistance. We have isolated an inhibitor of insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
activity from cultured fibroblasts of an insulin resistant
NIDDM
patient and identified it as membrane glycoprotein PC-1. Subsequently we have demonstrated that expression of PC-1 is elevated in fibroblasts from other insulin resistant subjects, both with and without
NIDDM
. Studies in muscle, the primary site for insulin-mediated glucose disposal, have shown that the levels of PC-1 in this tissue are inversely correlated to insulin action both in vivo and in vitro. Transfection of PC-1 into cultured cells has confirmed that overexpression of PC-1 can produce impairments in insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
activity and the subsequent cellular responses to insulin. Preliminary data suggests a direct interaction between PC-1 and the insulin receptor. However, the mechanisms whereby PC-1 inhibits insulin receptor signaling remain to be determined.
...
PMID:Membrane glycoprotein PC-1 and insulin resistance. 960 27
Insulin action starts with binding to a membrane receptor (insulin receptor-
tyrosine kinase
) and with activating an insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1) and substrate 2 (IRS-2). Insulin receptors interact at least with three cascade reactions, phosphorylating G proteins and IRS-1, that activate PLC "ras" and PI-3-K.
NIDDM
can be defined as a disease caused by defective transduction of insulin signals and IR as a complex phenotype manifesting itself, emphasized by individual and environmental factors, in the cellular systems of signal transduction. IRS is a syndrome characterized by
NIDDM
, hypertension, visceral obesity, CHD: the X syndrome. Up to day the described mutations of the insulin-receptor gene are rare (e.g. the leprechaunism): genetic IR. Obesity is the principal cause of IR by receptorial and post-receptorial defects: metabolic IR. The obese skeletal muscle shows a reduction of insulin receptor and IRS-1 phosphorylation and of PI-3-K activation; the scarce expression of these proteins would determine the muscular IR. IR is a pattern of essential hypertension. Hypertension, dyslipidemia and abnormality of glucose metabolism are linked by IR. The so called high erythrocyte Na(+)-Li+ counter-transport is a new biochemical marker for IR and hypertension. These drugs can reduce IR: metformin, sulphonilureas, fibrats, dexfenfluramine, troglitazone, doxazosin, ACE-inhibitors.
...
PMID:[Insulin resistance. Receptor and post-receptor abnormalities]. 984 54
GDM develops in 1-3% of all pregnancies. Women with GDM are characterized by a relatively diminished insulin secretion coupled with a pregnancy-induced insulin resistance primary located in skeletal muscle tissue. The cellular background for this insulin resistance is not known. The binding of insulin to its receptor and the subsequent activation of the insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
have significant importance for the cellular effect of insulin. Thus, the pathogenesis to the insulin resistance was studied by investigating insulin receptor binding and
tyrosine kinase
activity in skeletal muscle biopsies from women with GDM and pregnant controls. No major abnormalities were found in GDM wherefore it is likely that the insulin resistance is caused by intracellular defects distal to the activation of the
tyrosine kinase
. Glucose tolerance returns to normal postpartum in the majority of women with GDM. However, previous studies, in populations quite different from a Danish population, have shown that women with previous GDM have a high risk of developing overt diabetes mellitus later in life. Hence, we aimed to investigate the prognosis of women with previous GDM with respect to subsequent development of diabetes and also to identify predictive factors for the development of overt diabets in these women. A follow-up study of diet treated GDM women diagnosed during 1978 to 1985 at the Rigshospital, Copenhagen was performed. Glucose tolerance was evaluated in 241 women (81% of the GDM population) 2-11 years after pregnancy. Abnormal glucose tolerance was found in 34.4% of the women (3.7% IDDM, 13.7%
NIDDM
, 17% IGT) in contrast to a control group where none had diabetes and 5.3% had IGT. Logistic regression analysis identified the following independent risk factors for later development of diabetes: a high fasting glucose level at diagnosis of GDM, a delivery more than 3 weeks before term, and an abnormal OGTT 2 months postpartum. Low insulin secretion at diagnosis of GDM was also an independent risk factor. The presence of ICA and GAD-autoantibodies in pregnancy was associated with later development of IDDM. In another study the following techniques: hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp, indirect calorimetry and tritiated glucose infusion were used to evaluate insulin sensitivity in glucose tolerant nonobese women with previous GDM and controls. A decreased insulin sensitivity due to a decreased non-oxidative glucose metabolism in skeletal muscle was found in women with previous GDM. Hence, the activity of three key enzymes in intracellular glucose metabolism (GS, HK and PFK) was studied in skeletal muscle biopsies obtained in the basal state and after 3 h hyperinsulinaemia, with the aim to identify the cellular defects causing the decreased insulin sensitivity. However, no abnormalities in enzyme activity was found. The same group of previous GDM women had a relatively reduced insulin secretion evaluated by the IVGTT. A longitudinal study of 91 GDM women showed a relatively reduced insulin secretion to oral glucose in pregnancy, postpartum as well as 5-11 years later. Thus the present review has shown that even nonobese glucose tolerant women with previous GDM are characterized by the metabolic profile of
NIDDM
i.e. insulin resistance and impaired insulin secretion. Hence, the combination of this finding together with the significantly increased risk for development of diabetes indicates that all women with previous GDM should have a regular assessment of their glucose tolerance in the years after pregnancy. The first OGTT should be performed around 2 months postpartum in order to diagnose women already diabetic and to identify women with the highest risk for later development of overt diabetes. Women with previous GDM comprise a target group for future intervention trials with the aim to prevent or delay development of
NIDDM
and IDDM.
...
PMID:Gestational diabetes mellitus and subsequent development of overt diabetes mellitus. 985 Aug 11
Membrane glycoprotein plasma cell 1 (PC-1) has been shown to be increased in
type 2 diabetes
and involved in insulin resistance through inhibiting the insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
, which was demonstrated using cultured breast cancer cells. However, other reports have shown contradictory results in Chinese hamster ovary cells and in vitro kinase assay. Thus, we considered it necessary to investigate the effect of PC-1 using highly insulin-sensitive cells. Here, we used two of the following approaches: 1) investigating PC-1 expression levels in insulin-responsive tissues in rat models of diabetes and 2) overexpressing PC-1 in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. We found that PC-1 was highly expressed in insulin-responsive tissues, such as liver and adipose tissue, in normal rats. However, high-fat feeding or streptozotocin-induced diabetes did not change its expression levels in liver, adipose tissue, and skeletal muscle. Thus, PC-1 expression levels were not associated with high-fat-diet-induced insulin resistance or hyperglycemia. Although PC-1 was increased in adipose tissue in Zucker fatty rats (protein level, by 50%; mRNA level, by 90%), its expression levels in liver and skeletal muscle, tissues that are more responsible for whole body glucose metabolism than adipose tissue, did not significantly differ from those in normal rats. Next, we overexpressed PC-1 in 3T3-L1 adipocytes using an adenovirus transfection system. PC-1 expression was markedly increased to a level 16-fold greater than that in normal human adipose tissue, which is higher than the previously reported levels in diabetic patients. However, insulin-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor and insulin receptor substrate 1, activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, and glucose uptake were not affected by PC-1 overexpression. These results strongly suggest that increased PC-1 expression is not causally related to insulin resistance.
...
PMID:No correlation of plasma cell 1 overexpression with insulin resistance in diabetic rats and 3T3-L1 adipocytes. 1038 40
Many recent data provide new, original insights into the mechanisms of action of the antidiabetic Metformin. Careful selection of most relevant data in terms of dosage prompted this original review, largely devoted to the drug action at the cell level and whose hypotheses/conclusions are tentatively interpreted according to corresponding basic scientific knowledge. Metformin interferes with several processes linked to HGP (gluconeogenesis, glycogenolysis and their regulatory mechanisms), lowering glucose production and resensitizing the liver to insulin. The hepatic drug effect is largely favoured by prevailing glycemia. In peripheral tissues, metformin potentiates the effects of both hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia. Increase in glucose-mediated glucose transport is mainly mediated by an improvement in the glucose transporter's intrinsic activity. Potentiation of the hormone effect relates to an increase in insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
activity. Both mechanisms (insulin signalling and glucose transport) result in the activation of glycogen synthase, a limiting enzyme in the causal defects of
NIDDM
. Exciting findings show that, conversely, priming cells with very low insulin concentrations also leads to full expression of metformin's antidiabetic activity. Specific investigations confirm a working hypothesis defining the site of action as the cell membrane level. Indeed metformin corrects membrane fluidity and protein configuration disturbed by the diabetic state and which interfere with normal protein-protein or protein-lipid interactions required for proper functioning of the processes regulating glucose transport/metabolism. It is proposed that membrane changes largely represent a common denominator explaining metformin effects on various systems involved in receptor signalling and related functions.
...
PMID:Membrane physiology as a basis for the cellular effects of metformin in insulin resistance and diabetes. 1044 22
Metformin is regarded as an antihyperglycaemic agent because it lowers blood glucose concentrations in type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes without causing overt hypoglycaemia. Its clinical efficacy requires the presence of insulin and involves several therapeutic effects. Of these effects, some are mediated via increased insulin action, and some are not directly insulin dependent. Metformin acts on the liver to suppress gluconeogenesis mainly by potentiating the effect of insulin, reducing hepatic extraction of certain substrates (e.g. lactate) and opposing the effects of glucagon. In addition, metformin can reduce the overall rate of glycogenolysis and decrease the activity of hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase. Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake into skeletal muscle is enhanced by metformin. This has been attributed in part to increased movement of insulin-sensitive glucose transporters into the cell membrane. Metformin also appears to increase the functional properties of insulin- and glucose-sensitive transporters. The increased cellular uptake of glucose is associated with increased glycogen synthase activity and glycogen storage. Other effects involved in the blood glucose-lowering effect of metformin include an insulin-independent suppression of fatty acid oxidation and a reduction in hypertriglyceridaemia. These effects reduce the energy supply for gluconeogenesis and serve to balance the glucose-fatty acid (Randle) cycle. Increased glucose turnover, particularly in the splanchnic bed, may also contribute to the blood glucose-lowering capability of metformin. Metformin improves insulin sensitivity by increasing insulin-mediated insulin receptor
tyrosine kinase
activity, which activates post-receptor insulin signalling pathways. Some other effects of metformin may result from changes in membrane fluidity in hyperglycaemic states. Metformin therefore improves hepatic and peripheral sensitivity to insulin, with both direct and indirect effects on liver and muscle. It also exerts effects that are independent of insulin but cannot substitute for this hormone. These effects collectively reduce insulin resistance and glucotoxicity in
type 2 diabetes
.
...
PMID:The antihyperglycaemic effect of metformin: therapeutic and cellular mechanisms. 1057 23
Decreased GLUT4 expression, impaired insulin receptor (IR), IRS-1, and pp60/IRS-3 tyrosine phosphorylation are characteristics of adipocytes from insulin-resistant animal models and obese
NIDDM
humans. However, the sequence of events leading to the development of insulin signaling defects and the significance of decreased GLUT4 expression in causing adipocyte insulin resistance are unknown. The present study used male heterozygous GLUT4 knockout mice (GLUT4(+/-)) as a novel model of diabetes to study the development of insulin signaling defects in adipocytes with the progression of whole body insulin resistance and diabetes. Male GLUT4(+/-) mice with normal fed glycemia and insulinemia (N/N), normal fed glycemia and hyperinsulinemia (N/H), and fed hyperglycemia with hyperinsulinemia (H/H) exist at all ages. The expression of GLUT4 protein and the maximal insulin-stimulated glucose transport was 50% decreased in adipocytes from all three groups. Insulin signaling was normal in N/N adipose cells. From 35 to 70% reductions in insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of IR, IRS-1, and pp60/IRS-3 were noted with no changes in the cellular content of IR, IRS-1, and p85 in N/H adipocytes. Insulin-stimulated protein tyrosine phosphorylation was further decreased to 12-23% in H/H adipose cells accompanied by 42% decreased IR and 80% increased p85 expression. Insulin-stimulated, IRS-1-associated PI3 kinase activity was decreased by 20% in N/H and 68% reduced in H/H GLUT4(+/-) adipocytes. However, total insulin-stimulated PI3 kinase activity was normal in H/H GLUT4(+/-) adipocytes. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that hyperinsulinemia triggers a reduction of IR
tyrosine kinase
activity that is further exacerbated by the appearance of hyperglycemia. However, the insulin signaling cascade has sufficient plasticity to accommodate significant changes in specific components without further reducing glucose uptake. Furthermore, the data indicate that the cellular content of GLUT4 is the rate-limiting factor in mediating maximal insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in GLUT4(+/-) adipocytes.
...
PMID:Reduced glucose uptake precedes insulin signaling defects in adipocytes from heterozygous GLUT4 knockout mice. 1083 33
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