Literature DB >> 26212261

Impairment of Liver Glycogen Storage in the db/db Animal Model of Type 2 Diabetes: A Potential Target for Future Therapeutics?

Mitchell A Sullivan, Brooke E Harcourt, Ping Xu, Josephine M Forbes, Robert G Gilbert1.   

Abstract

After the discovery of the db gene in 1966, it was determined that a blood-borne satiety factor was produced excessively, but was not responded to, in db/db mice. This model for type 2 diabetes is widely used since it phenocopies human disease and its co-morbidities including obesity, progressive deterioration in glucose tolerance, hypertension and hyperlipidaemia. Db/db mice, unlike their non-diabetic controls, have consistently elevated levels of liver glycogen, most likely due to hyperphagia. In transmission electron micrographs, liver glycogen usually shows a composite cauliflower-like morphology of large "α particles" (with a wide range of sizes) made up of smaller "β particles" bound together. New studies have explored the size distribution of liver glycogen molecules and found that α particles in db/db mice are more chemically fragile than those in healthy mice, and can readily break apart to smaller β particles. There is evidence that smaller glycogen particles have a higher association with glycogen phosphorylase, a key enzyme involved in glycogen degradation, as well as being degraded more rapidly in vitro; therefore the inability to form stable large glycogen α particles is predicted to result in a faster, less controlled degradation into glucose. The implications of this for glycaemic control remain to be fully elucidated. However, "rescuing" the more fragile diabetic glycogen to decrease hepatic glucose output in type 2 diabetes, may provide a potential therapeutic target which is the subject of this review.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26212261     DOI: 10.2174/1389450116666150727123115

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Drug Targets        ISSN: 1389-4501            Impact factor:   3.465


  6 in total

1.  Alcohol-induced ketonemia is associated with lowering of blood glucose, downregulation of gluconeogenic genes, and depletion of hepatic glycogen in type 2 diabetic db/db mice.

Authors:  Mukund P Srinivasan; Noha M Shawky; Bhupendra S Kaphalia; Muthusamy Thangaraju; Lakshman Segar
Journal:  Biochem Pharmacol       Date:  2018-12-07       Impact factor: 5.858

2.  Cell walls of the dimorphic fungal pathogens Sporothrix schenckii and Sporothrix brasiliensis exhibit bilaminate structures and sloughing of extensive and intact layers.

Authors:  Leila M Lopes-Bezerra; Louise A Walker; Gustavo Niño-Vega; Héctor M Mora-Montes; Gabriela W P Neves; Hector Villalobos-Duno; Laura Barreto; Karina Garcia; Bernardo Franco; José A Martínez-Álvarez; Carol A Munro; Neil A R Gow
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2018-03-09

3.  Time-dependent effects of ipragliflozin on behaviour and energy homeostasis in normal and type 2 diabetic rats: continuous glucose telemetry analysis.

Authors:  Hiroyuki Iuchi; Masaya Sakamoto; Daisuke Matsutani; Hirofumi Suzuki; Yosuke Kayama; Norihiko Takeda; Susumu Minamisawa; Kazunori Utsunomiya
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-09-19       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 4.  The importance of glycogen molecular structure for blood glucose control.

Authors:  Asad Nawaz; Peng Zhang; Enpeng Li; Robert G Gilbert; Mitchell A Sullivan
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2020-12-16

5.  Evaluation of Diabetes Effects of Selenium Nanoparticles Synthesized from a Mixture of Luteolin and Diosmin on Streptozotocin-Induced Type 2 Diabetes in Mice.

Authors:  Rosa Martha Pérez Gutiérrez; Julio Téllez Gómez; Raúl Borja Urby; José G Contreras Soto; Héctor Romo Parra
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2022-09-01       Impact factor: 4.927

6.  Metformin normalizes the structural changes in glycogen preceding prediabetes in mice overexpressing neuropeptide Y in noradrenergic neurons.

Authors:  Liisa Ailanen; Natalia N Bezborodkina; Laura Virtanen; Suvi T Ruohonen; Anastasia V Malova; Sergey V Okovityi; Elizaveta Y Chistyakova; Eriika Savontaus
Journal:  Pharmacol Res Perspect       Date:  2018-03-08
  6 in total

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