| Literature DB >> 21812914 |
Marc G Jeschke1, Darren Boehning.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes, a rapidly growing disease of modern aetiology, has a profound impact on morbidity and mortality. Explosions in the understanding of the underlying cellular mechanisms which lead to type 2 diabetes have recently been elucidated. In particular, the central role of endoplasmic reticulum stress (ER stress) and the unfolding protein response (UPR) in insulin resistance in type 2 diabetes has recently been discovered. We hypothesize that ER stress and UPR are not only central for type 2 diabetes but also for stress-induced diabetes. We review here the evidence that post-burn insulin resistance and hyperglycaemia have pathophysiologic mechanisms in common with type 2 diabetes. These recent discoveries not only highlight the importance of ER stress in the post-burn patient recovery, but furthermore enable new models to study fundamental and interventional aspects of type 2 diabetes.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 21812914 PMCID: PMC3217064 DOI: 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2011.01405.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Mol Med ISSN: 1582-1838 Impact factor: 5.310
Fig 1ER stress pathways activated post-burn are similar to those mediating type 2 diabetes. Burn injury causes multi-organ ER stress characterized by activation of all three arms of the ER stress response. In animal burn models, hepatic ER calcium stores are depleted most likely by activation of IP3R calcium channels leading to accumulation of unfolded polypeptides and activation of IRE1, PERK and ATF6 [53]. The mechanism by which the IP3R is activated is still unclear, but may be mediated by Fas receptor activation or calcium mobilizing cytokines (see text for details). Activation of JNK is prominent post-burn, leading to IRS-1 phosphorylation and suppression of PI3K activation (schematically represented by the p110 and p85 subunits) and ultimately insulin resistance [54, 55]. Insulin resistance in burn patients persists for an extended period of time (‘unresolved’ ER stress) similar to type 2 diabetes [78]. This may be mediated by suppression of XBP-1s/p85 transcriptional activity by JNK [60].