| Literature DB >> 10567373 |
W M MacFarlane1, J C Chapman, R M Shepherd, M N Hashmi, N Kamimura, K E Cosgrove, R E O'Brien, P D Barnes, A W Hart, H M Docherty, K J Lindley, A Aynsley-Green, R F James, K Docherty, M J Dunne.
Abstract
Persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy (PHHI) is a neonatal disease characterized by dysregulation of insulin secretion accompanied by profound hypoglycemia. We have discovered that islet cells, isolated from the pancreas of a PHHI patient, proliferate in culture while maintaining a beta cell-like phenotype. The PHHI-derived cell line (NES2Y) exhibits insulin secretory characteristics typical of islet cells derived from these patients, i.e. they have no K(ATP) channel activity and as a consequence secrete insulin at constitutively high levels in the absence of glucose. In addition, they exhibit impaired expression of the homeodomain transcription factor PDX1, which is a key component of the signaling pathway linking nutrient metabolism to the regulation of insulin gene expression. To repair these defects NES2Y cells were triple-transfected with cDNAs encoding the two components of the K(ATP) channel (SUR1 and Kir6.2) and PDX1. One selected clonal cell line (NISK9) had normal K(ATP) channel activity, and as a result of changes in intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis ([Ca(2+)](i)) secreted insulin within the physiological range of glucose concentrations. This approach to engineering PHHI-derived islet cells may be of use in gene therapy for PHHI and in cell engineering techniques for administering insulin for the treatment of diabetes mellitus.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10567373 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.274.48.34059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157