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This version published online on February 24, 2005
Endocrinology, doi:10.1210/en.2004-1109
A more recent version of this article appeared on June 1, 2005
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Submitted on August 23, 2004
Accepted on February 16, 2005

Release of transgenic human insulin from gastric G cells: a novel approach for the amelioration of diabetes

Yu-Chun Lu, Catia Sternini, Enrique Rozengurt, and Elena Zhukova*

Department of Medicine, Division of Digestive Diseases, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and CURE: Digestive Diseases Research Center, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ezhukova{at}mednet.ucla.edu.

We explored the hypothesis that meal-regulated release of insulin from gastric G cells can be used for gene therapy for diabetes. Transgenic mice in which the coding sequence of human insulin has been knocked into the mouse gastrin gene were generated. Insulin was localized specifically to antral G cells of G-InsKi mice by double immunofluorescence staining using antibodies against insulin and gastrin. Insulin extracted from antral stomach of G-InsKi mice decreased blood glucose upon injection into streptozotocin-diabetic mice. Intragastric administration of peptone, a known potent luminal stimulant of gastrin secretion, induced an increase in circulating levels of transgenic human insulin from 10.7 ± 2 pM to 23.3 ± 4 pM in G-InsKi mice. Though G cell-produced insulin decreased blood glucose in G-InsKi mice, it did not cause toxic hypoglycemia. Proton pump inhibitors, pharmacological agents that increase gastrin output, caused a further increase in the circulating levels of gastric insulin (41.5 ± 2 pM). G cell-produced insulin was released into circulation in response to the same meal-associated stimuli that control release of gastrin. The most striking aspect of the results presented here is that in the presence of the G-InsKi allele, Ins2Akita/+ mice exhibited a marked prolongation of life span. These results imply that G cell-derived transgenic insulin is beneficial in the amelioration of diabetes. We suggest that an efficient G cells-based insulin gene therapy can relieve diabetic patients from daily insulin injections, protect them from complications of insulin insufficiency, while avoiding episodes of toxic hypoglycemia.


Key words: transgenic insulin • glycemia • knock-in mice • enteroendocrine cells







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