| Literature DB >> 23825225 |
Alan K L Kai1, Amy K M Lam, Yingxian Chen, Andrew C P Tai, Xinmei Zhang, Angela K W Lai, Patrick K K Yeung, Sidney Tam, Jian Wang, Karen S Lam, Paul M Vanhoutte, Johannes L Bos, Stephen S M Chung, Aimin Xu, Sookja K Chung.
Abstract
Previously, exchange protein directly activated by cAMP 2 (Epac2) and PKA were known to play a role in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) by pancreatic β cells. The present study shows that Epac1 mRNA is also expressed by β cells. Therefore, we generated mice and embryonic stem (ES) cells with deletion of the Epac1 gene to define its role in β-cell biology and metabolism. The homozygous Epac1-knockout (Epac1(-/-)) mice developed impaired glucose tolerance and GSIS with deranged islet cytoarchitecture, which was confirmed by isolated islets from adult Epac1(-/-) mice. Moreover, Epac1(-/-) mice developed more severe hyperglycemia with increased β-cell apoptosis and insulitis after multiple low-dose streptozotocin (MLDS; 40 mg/kg) treatment than Epac1(+/+) mice. Interestingly, Epac1(-/-) mice also showed metabolic defects, including increased respiratory exchange ratio (RER) and plasma triglyceride (TG), and more severe diet-induced obesity with insulin resistance, which may contributed to β-cell dysfunction. However, islets differentiated from Epac1(-/-) ES cells showed insulin secretion defect, reduced Glut2 and PDX-1 expression, and abolished GLP-1-stimulated PCNA induction, suggesting a role of Epac1 in β-cell function. The current study provides in vitro and in vivo evidence that Epac1 has an important role in GSIS of β cells and phenotype resembling metabolic syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: glucose transporter type 2; glucose-stimulated insulin secretion; high-fat-diet-induced obesity; hyperglycemia; multiple low-dose streptozotocin-induced diabetes
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23825225 DOI: 10.1096/fj.13-230433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191