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Submitted on July 6, 2004
Accepted on November 15, 2004
Department of Pharmacology, Institute of Physiological Sciences and Department of Pathology, University of Lund and Department of Molecular Medicine, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: henrik.mosen{at}farm.lu.se.
The GK rat displays a markedly reduced insulin response to glucose, a defect which is thought to be coupled to an impaired glucose signaling in the
-cell. We have examined whether carbon monoxide (CO), derived from
-cell heme oxygenase (HO), might be involved in the secretory dysfunction. Immunocytochemical labeling of constitutive HO (HO-2) showed no overt difference in fluorescence pattern in islets from GK vs. Wistar controls. However, isolated islets from GK rats displayed a markedly impaired HO activity measured as CO production (-50%) and immunoblotting revealed an approximately 50% reduction of HO-2 protein expression compared with Wistar controls. Further, there was a prominent expression of inducible HO (HO-1) in GK islets. Incubation of isolated islets showed that the glucose-stimulated CO production and the glucose-stimulated insulin response were considerably reduced in GK islets compared with Wistar islets. Addition of the HO activator hemin or gaseous CO to the incubation media brought about a similar amplification of glucose-stimulated insulin release in GK and Wistar islets suggesting that distal steps in the HO-CO signaling pathway were not appreciably affected. We conclude that the defective insulin response to glucose in the GK rat can be explained, at least in part, by a marked impairment of the glucose-HO-CO signaling pathway as manifested by a prominent decrease in glucose stimulation of islet CO production and a reduced expression of HO-2. A possible role of HO-1 expression as a compensatory mechanism in the GK islets is presently unclear.
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H. Mosen, A. Salehi, R. Henningsson, and I. Lundquist Nitric oxide inhibits, and carbon monoxide activates, islet acid {alpha}-glucoside hydrolase activities in parallel with glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. J. Endocrinol., September 1, 2006; 190(3): 681 - 693. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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