Literature DB >> 24523032

The importance of the cellular stress response in the pathogenesis and treatment of type 2 diabetes.

Philip L Hooper1, Gabor Balogh, Eric Rivas, Kylie Kavanagh, Laszlo Vigh.   

Abstract

Organisms have evolved to survive rigorous environments and are not prepared to thrive in a world of caloric excess and sedentary behavior. A realization that physical exercise (or lack of it) plays a pivotal role in both the pathogenesis and therapy of type 2 diabetes mellitus (t2DM) has led to the provocative concept of therapeutic exercise mimetics. A decade ago, we attempted to simulate the beneficial effects of exercise by treating t2DM patients with 3 weeks of daily hyperthermia, induced by hot tub immersion. The short-term intervention had remarkable success, with a 1 % drop in HbA1, a trend toward weight loss, and improvement in diabetic neuropathic symptoms. An explanation for the beneficial effects of exercise and hyperthermia centers upon their ability to induce the cellular stress response (the heat shock response) and restore cellular homeostasis. Impaired stress response precedes major metabolic defects associated with t2DM and may be a near seminal event in the pathogenesis of the disease, tipping the balance from health into disease. Heat shock protein inducers share metabolic pathways associated with exercise with activation of AMPK, PGC1-a, and sirtuins. Diabetic therapies that induce the stress response, whether via heat, bioactive compounds, or genetic manipulation, improve or prevent all of the morbidities and comorbidities associated with the disease. The agents reduce insulin resistance, inflammatory cytokines, visceral adiposity, and body weight while increasing mitochondrial activity, normalizing membrane structure and lipid composition, and preserving organ function. Therapies restoring the stress response can re-tip the balance from disease into health and address the multifaceted defects associated with the disease.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24523032      PMCID: PMC4041942          DOI: 10.1007/s12192-014-0493-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones        ISSN: 1355-8145            Impact factor:   3.667


  206 in total

1.  Divergence of intracellular and extracellular HSP72 in type 2 diabetes: does fat matter?

Authors:  Josianne Rodrigues-Krause; Mauricio Krause; C O'Hagan; Giuseppe De Vito; Colin Boreham; Colin Murphy; Philip Newsholme; Gerard Colleran
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2012-01-04       Impact factor: 3.667

Review 2.  The exercise-induced stress response of skeletal muscle, with specific emphasis on humans.

Authors:  James P Morton; Anna C Kayani; Anne McArdle; Barry Drust
Journal:  Sports Med       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 11.136

3.  Insulin receptor activation through its accumulation in lipid rafts by mild electrical stress.

Authors:  Saori Morino-Koga; Shuichiro Yano; Tatsuya Kondo; Yuichiro Shimauchi; Shingo Matsuyama; Yuka Okamoto; Mary Ann Suico; Tomoaki Koga; Takashi Sato; Tsuyoshi Shuto; Hidetoshi Arima; Ikuo Wada; Eiichi Araki; Hirofumi Kai
Journal:  J Cell Physiol       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 6.384

4.  Enzyme activity and fiber composition in skeletal muscle of untrained and trained men.

Authors:  P D Gollnick; R B Armstrong; C W Saubert; K Piehl; B Saltin
Journal:  J Appl Physiol       Date:  1972-09       Impact factor: 3.531

Review 5.  The metabolic syndrome.

Authors:  Robert H Eckel; Scott M Grundy; Paul Z Zimmet
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2005 Apr 16-22       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  TRPV1 activation improves exercise endurance and energy metabolism through PGC-1α upregulation in mice.

Authors:  Zhidan Luo; Liqun Ma; Zhigang Zhao; Hongbo He; Dachun Yang; Xiaoli Feng; Shuangtao Ma; Xiaoping Chen; Tianqi Zhu; Tingbing Cao; Daoyan Liu; Bernd Nilius; Yu Huang; Zhencheng Yan; Zhiming Zhu
Journal:  Cell Res       Date:  2011-12-20       Impact factor: 25.617

7.  Heat shock proteins induction reduces stress kinases activation, potentially improving insulin signalling in monocytes from obese subjects.

Authors:  David Simar; Andrew Jacques; Corinne Caillaud
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2012-03-29       Impact factor: 3.667

Review 8.  Invited review: effect of acute exercise on insulin signaling and action in humans.

Authors:  Jørgen F P Wojtaszewski; Jakob N Nielsen; Erik A Richter
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2002-07

9.  Implication of inflammatory signaling pathways in obesity-induced insulin resistance.

Authors:  Jean-François Tanti; Franck Ceppo; Jennifer Jager; Flavien Berthou
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2013-01-08       Impact factor: 5.555

10.  KU-32, a novel drug for diabetic neuropathy, is safe for human islets and improves in vitro insulin secretion and viability.

Authors:  Kevin Farmer; S Janette Williams; Lesya Novikova; Karthik Ramachandran; Sonia Rawal; Brian S J Blagg; Rick Dobrowsky; Lisa Stehno-Bittel
Journal:  Exp Diabetes Res       Date:  2012-11-01
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  35 in total

1.  Attenuation of exercise-induced heat shock protein 72 expression blunts improvements in whole-body insulin resistance in rats with type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  Takamasa Tsuzuki; Hiroyuki Kobayashi; Toshinori Yoshihara; Ryo Kakigi; Noriko Ichinoseki-Sekine; Hisashi Naito
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2017-02-02       Impact factor: 3.667

2.  Acute exercise boosts cell proliferation and the heat shock response in lymphocytes: correlation with cytokine production and extracellular-to-intracellular HSP70 ratio.

Authors:  Thiago Gomes Heck; Sofia Pizzato Scomazzon; Patrícia Renck Nunes; Cinthia Maria Schöler; Gustavo Stumpf da Silva; Aline Bittencourt; Maria Cristina Faccioni-Heuser; Mauricio Krause; Roberto Barbosa Bazotte; Rui Curi; Paulo Ivo Homem de Bittencourt
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2017-03-01       Impact factor: 3.667

3.  Detectable levels of eHSP72 in plasma are associated with physical activity and antioxidant enzyme activity levels in hypertensive subjects.

Authors:  Eliara Ten Caten Martins; Rafaella Zulianello Dos Santos; Analu Bender Dos Santos; Pauline Brendler Goettems Fiorin; Yana Picinin Sandri; Matias Nunes Frizzo; Mirna Stela Ludwig; Thiago Gomes Heck; Magnus Benetti
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2018-09-20       Impact factor: 3.667

4.  Acute heat stress reduces biomarkers of endothelial activation but not macro- or microvascular dysfunction in cervical spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Geoff B Coombs; Otto F Barak; Aaron A Phillips; Tanja Mijacika; Zoe K Sarafis; Amanda H X Lee; Jordan W Squair; Tyler D Bammert; Noah M DeSouza; Daniel Gagnon; Andrei V Krassioukov; Zeljko Dujic; Christopher A DeSouza; Philip N Ainslie
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2018-12-21       Impact factor: 4.733

5.  The life and times of Ferruccio Ritossa.

Authors:  Mauro Capocci; M Gabriella Santoro; Lawrence E Hightower
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 3.667

6.  Hsp72 and Hsp90α mRNA transcription is characterised by large, sustained changes in core temperature during heat acclimation.

Authors:  Oliver R Gibson; James A Tuttle; Peter W Watt; Neil S Maxwell; Lee Taylor
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2016-08-11       Impact factor: 3.667

7.  Fine particulate matter potentiates type 2 diabetes development in high-fat diet-treated mice: stress response and extracellular to intracellular HSP70 ratio analysis.

Authors:  Pauline Brendler Goettems-Fiorin; Bethânia Salamoni Grochanke; Fernanda Giesel Baldissera; Analu Bender Dos Santos; Paulo Ivo Homem de Bittencourt; Mirna Stela Ludwig; Claudia Ramos Rhoden; Thiago Gomes Heck
Journal:  J Physiol Biochem       Date:  2016-06-29       Impact factor: 4.158

8.  Short-term but not long-term hypoglycaemia enhances plasma levels and hepatic expression of HSP72 in insulin-treated rats: an effect associated with increased IL-6 levels but not with IL-10 or TNF-α.

Authors:  Mirna Stela Ludwig; Vânia Cibele Minguetti-Câmara; Thiago Gomes Heck; Sofia Pizzato Scomazzon; Patrícia Renck Nunes; Roberto Barbosa Bazotte; Paulo Ivo Homem de Bittencourt
Journal:  Mol Cell Biochem       Date:  2014-08-06       Impact factor: 3.396

9.  Correlation between heat shock proteins, adiponectin, and T lymphocyte cytokine expression in type 2 diabetics.

Authors:  Fadia F Mahmoud; David Haines; Ali A Dashti; Sherief El-Shazly; Fawzia Al-Najjar
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2018-05-11       Impact factor: 3.667

10.  Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) suppresses biomarkers of cell stress and kidney injury in diabetic mice.

Authors:  Rajeev Verma; Avijeet Chopra; Charles Giardina; Venkata Sabbisetti; Joan A Smyth; Lawrence E Hightower; George A Perdrizet
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2015-02-04       Impact factor: 3.667

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