Publications by Year: 2005

2005

Fu, Mingui, Jifeng Zhang, Yu-Hua Tseng, Taixing Cui, Xiaojun Zhu, Yan Xiao, Yongshan Mou, et al. 2005. “Rad GTPase attenuates vascular lesion formation by inhibition of vascular smooth muscle cell migration”. Circulation 111 (8): 1071-7. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.0000156439.55349.AD.
BACKGROUND: Rad (Ras associated with diabetes) GTPase is a prototypic member of a new subfamily of Ras-related GTPases with unique structural features, although its physiological role remains largely unknown. In the present study, we characterized the Rad function in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and the influence of adenovirus-mediated Rad (Ad-Rad) gene delivery on vascular remodeling after experimental angioplasty. METHODS AND RESULTS: We documented for the first time that neointimal formation using balloon-injured rat carotid arteries was associated with a significant increase in Rad expression as determined by immunohistochemistry and quantitative real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. The levels of Rad expression in VSMCs were highly induced by platelet-derived growth factor and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Morphometric analyses 14 days after injury revealed significantly diminished neointimal formation in the Ad-Rad-treated carotid arteries compared with Ad-GFP or PBS controls, whereas the mutated form of Rad GTPase, which can bind GDP but not GTP, increased neointimal formation. Overexpression of Rad significantly inhibited the attachment and migration of VSMCs. In addition, Rad expression dramatically reduced the formation of focal contacts and stress fibers in VSMCs by blocking the Rho/ROK signaling pathway. CONCLUSIONS: Our data clearly identified Rad GTPase as a novel and critical mediator that inhibits vascular lesion formation. Manipulation of the Rad signaling pathway may provide new therapeutic approaches that will limit vascular pathological remodeling.
Wijesekara, Nadeeja, Daniel Konrad, Mohamed Eweida, Craig Jefferies, Nicole Liadis, Adria Giacca, Mike Crackower, et al. (2005) 2005. “Muscle-specific Pten deletion protects against insulin resistance and diabetes”. Mol Cell Biol 25 (3): 1135-45. https://doi.org/10.1128/MCB.25.3.1135-1145.2005.
Pten (phosphatase with tensin homology), a dual-specificity phosphatase, is a negative regulator of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt signaling pathway. Pten regulates a vast array of biological functions including growth, metabolism, and longevity. Although the PI3K/Akt pathway is a key determinant of the insulin-dependent increase in glucose uptake into muscle and adipose cells, the contribution of this pathway in muscle to whole-body glucose homeostasis is unclear. Here we show that muscle-specific deletion of Pten protected mice from insulin resistance and diabetes caused by high-fat feeding. Deletion of muscle Pten resulted in enhanced insulin-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose uptake and Akt phosphorylation in soleus but, surprisingly, not in extensor digitorum longus muscle compared to littermate controls upon high-fat feeding, and these mice were spared from developing hyperinsulinemia and islet hyperplasia. Muscle Pten may be a potential target for treatment or prevention of insulin resistance and diabetes.
Ehrenkranz, Joel, Norman Lewis, Ronald Kahn, and Jesse Roth. 2005. “Phlorizin: a review”. Diabetes Metab Res Rev 21 (1): 31-8. https://doi.org/10.1002/dmrr.532.
The dihydrochalcone phlorizin is a natural product and dietary constituent found in a number of fruit trees. It has been used as a pharmaceutical and tool for physiology research for over 150 years. Phlorizin's principal pharmacological action is to produce renal glycosuria and block intestinal glucose absorption through inhibition of the sodium-glucose symporters located in the proximal renal tubule and mucosa of the small intestine. This review covers the role phlorizin has played in the history of diabetes mellitus and its use as an agent to understand fundamental concepts in renal physiology as well as summarizes the physiology of cellular glucose transport and the pathophysiology of renal glycosuria. It reviews the biology and pathobiology of glucose transporters and discusses the medical botany of phlorizin and the potential effects of plant flavonoids, such as phlorizin, on human metabolism. Lastly, it describes the clinical pharmacology and toxicology of phlorizin, including investigational uses of phlorizin and phlorizin analogs in the treatment of diabetes, obesity, and stress hyperglycemia.
McGettrick, Aileen, Edward Feener, and Ronald Kahn. 2005. “Human insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) polymorphism G972R causes IRS-1 to associate with the insulin receptor and inhibit receptor autophosphorylation”. J Biol Chem 280 (8): 6441-6. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M412300200.
The most commonly detected polymorphism in human insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1), a glycine to arginine change at codon 972 (G972R), is associated with an increased risk of Type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance. To determine the molecular mechanism by which this polymorphism may be linked to insulin resistance, we produced recombinant peptides comprising amino acid residues 925-1008 from IRS-1 that contain either a glycine or arginine at codon 972 and the two nearby tyrosine phosphorylation consensus sites (EY(941)MLM and DY(989)MTM), which are known binding sites for the p85alpha regulatory subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. The wild type peptide could be phosphorylated at these sites in vitro by purified insulin receptor. Introduction of the G972R polymorphism into the peptide reduced the amount of tyrosine phosphorylation by >60%. Pull-down experiments indicated that there was an association between the IRS-1-(925-1008) peptide and the insulin receptor that was markedly enhanced by the presence of the G972R polymorphism. The use of additional overlapping fragments localized this interaction to domains between residues 950-986 of IRS-1 and residues 966-1271 of the insulin receptor, containing the tyrosine kinase domain of the receptor. In addition, the IRS-1-(925-1008) G972R peptide acted as a competitive inhibitor of insulin receptor and insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor autophosphorylation. Taken together, these data indicate that the G972R naturally occurring polymorphism of IRS-1 not only reduces phosphorylation of the substrate but allows IRS-1 to act as an inhibitor of the insulin receptor kinase, producing global insulin resistance.