| Literature DB >> 26085101 |
Timothy B Durham1, James L Toth2, Valentine J Klimkowski2, Julia X C Cao3, Angela M Siesky3, Jesline Alexander-Chacko3, Ginger Y Wu3, Jeffrey T Dixon2, James E McGee2, Yong Wang2, Sherry Y Guo2, Rachel Nicole Cavitt2, John Schindler2, Stefan J Thibodeaux4, Nathan A Calvert5, Michael J Coghlan2, Dana K Sindelar3, Michael Christe3, Vladislav V Kiselyov3, M Dodson Michael3, Kyle W Sloop3.
Abstract
Insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE, insulysin) is the best characterized catabolic enzyme implicated in proteolysis of insulin. Recently, a peptide inhibitor of IDE has been shown to affect levels of insulin, amylin, and glucagon in vivo. However, IDE(-/-) mice display variable phenotypes relating to fasting plasma insulin levels, glucose tolerance, and insulin sensitivity depending on the cohort and age of animals. Here, we interrogated the importance of IDE-mediated catabolism on insulin clearance in vivo. Using a structure-based design, we linked two newly identified ligands binding at unique IDE exosites together to construct a potent series of novel inhibitors. These compounds do not interact with the catalytic zinc of the protease. Because one of these inhibitors (NTE-1) was determined to have pharmacokinetic properties sufficient to sustain plasma levels >50 times its IDE IC50 value, studies in rodents were conducted. In oral glucose tolerance tests with diet-induced obese mice, NTE-1 treatment improved the glucose excursion. Yet in insulin tolerance tests and euglycemic clamp experiments, NTE-1 did not enhance insulin action or increase plasma insulin levels. Importantly, IDE inhibition with NTE-1 did result in elevated plasma amylin levels, suggesting the in vivo role of IDE action on amylin may be more significant than an effect on insulin. Furthermore, using the inhibitors described in this report, we demonstrate that in HEK cells IDE has little impact on insulin clearance. In total, evidence from our studies supports a minimal role for IDE in insulin metabolism in vivo and suggests IDE may be more important in helping regulate amylin clearance.Entities:
Keywords: Insulin-degrading enzyme; amylin; cryptidase; diabetes; exosite; glucagon; glucose metabolism; insulin; insulysin; protease inhibitor
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26085101 PMCID: PMC4536412 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M115.638205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157