| Literature DB >> 28736498 |
Juliette Raffort1,2, Fabien Lareyre2,3, Damien Massalou4, Patrick Fénichel5, Patricia Panaïa-Ferrari1,2, Giulia Chinetti1,2.
Abstract
Glicentin is a proglucagon-derived peptide mainly produced in the L-intestinal cells. While the roles of other members of the proglucagon family including glucagon-like peptide 1, glucagon-like peptide 2 and oxyntomodulin has been well studied, the functions and variation of glicentin in human are not fully understood. Experimental and clinical studies have highlighted its role in both intestinal physiology and glucose metabolism, pointing to its potential interest in a wide range of pathological states including gastrointestinal and metabolic disorders. Due to its structure presenting many similarities with the other proglucagon-derived peptides, its measurement is technically challenging. The recent commercialization of specific detection methods has offered new opportunities to go further in the understanding of glicentin physiology. Here we summarize the current knowledge on glicentin biogenesis and physiological roles. In the limelight of clinical studies investigating glicentin variation in human, we discuss future directions for potential applications in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: enteroendocrine cells; glicentin; glucagon-like peptide; oxyntomodulin; proglucagon
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28736498 PMCID: PMC5508206 DOI: 10.11613/BM.2017.034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
Figure 1Processing of the proglucagon gene into proglucagon-derived peptides (modified from Baggio et al. (), Holst et al. (), Bataille et al. (, ), Whiting et al. ()) and DeFronzo et al. ()). () The proglucagon gene is located on the chromosome 2 and is composed of 6 exons and 5 introns. () The gene transcription leads to a messenger RNA. () The messenger RNA (mRNA) is translated into the proglucagon, a 178 amino-acid precursor protein. () Posttranslational processing in the alpha pancreatic cells involves mainly the proconvertase 2 (PC2) and leads to the glicentin related pancreatic polypeptide (GRPP), the glucagon, the intervening peptide-1 (IP-1) and the major proglucagon fragment (MPF). () An alternative pathway involving proconvertase 1 and 3 (PC1/3) can lead to glucagon like peptide 1 (GLP-1) formation in the pancreas. () In the enteroendocrine L-cells and in the central nervous system, post-translational processing of proglucagon is mediated by proconvertases 1 and 3 and liberates the glicentin, the oxyntomodulin, the glucagon like peptide 1, the Intervening Peptide-2 (IP-2) and the glucagon like peptide 2 (GLP-2). DNA - deoxyribonucleic acid.
Summary of experimental studies on glicentin functions and variation
| Piglets - administration of butter, glycerol and sodium palmitate into the duodenum | Investigate the response of plasma glicentin to intraluminal fat loading. | Increase of plasma glicentin following butter and palmitate administration | Ohneda | |
| Piglets - administration of a mixture of 10 amino acids into the duodenum | Explore the effect of amino acids on glicentin secretion. | Increase of plasma glicentin following amino acids administration | Ohneda | |
| Piglets - administration of glucose into the duodenum | Investigate the secretion of glicentin in response to intraluminal administration of glucose. | Increase of plasma glicentin after glucose loading | Ohneda | |
| Rats - subcutaneous injection of glicentin (50 µg/kg every 12h for 2 weeks) | Examine the trophic effects of glicentin on small-intestinal mucosa and on the small-intestinal epithelial cell line IEC-6 | Jejunum - increase of weight, protein, DNA content and alkaline phosphatase activity in animals who were injected with glicentin; increase of ornithine decarboxylase activity after intraperitoneal injection of glicentin | Myojo | |
| Rats - parenteral nutrition for 6 days and administration of 1, 4, 20 or 80 µg/rat of glicentin via the jugular vein | Examine the effects of glicentin on intestinal proliferation | Dose-dependent increase of mucosal proliferation in the small intestine induced by glicentin, with an effect more pronounced in the ileum | Sasaki | |
| Rats - resection of the small intestine and aministration of methionyl rat glicentin (20 μ/day/rat) from the second day after the operation and during 28 days using miniosmotic pumps | Explore the effects of glicentin on intestinal adaptive responses to 70% resection of small intestine in rats | Rats with 70% distal intestinal resection - significant increase of the weight of the residual duodenum and its mucosal weight, protein, and diamine oxydase activity compared to controls. No significant change on the residual jejunum. | Hirotani | |
| Rats - construction of loops of jejunum and ileal Thiry-Vella fistulas (TVFs) that were isolated from the luminal stream and subcutaneous injection of glicentin (50 µg/kg every 12 hours for 1 week) | Determine whether the trophic effect of glicentin is mediated by mechanism involving luminal or non-luminal factors and determine whether glicentin exerts a differential trophic effect on jejunal or ileal mucosa | Effect of glicentin in the jejunal TVF group - increase of mucosal growth measurements in the TVF and the intact jejunum | Hashimoto | |
| Cell line, | Determine the effect of recombinant human glicentin on bacterial internalization by confluent enterocytes | Lower bacterial internalization through the glicentin-treated enterocytes than the non-treated | Chiba | |
| Human gastric biopsies - 7 cases with endoscopical intestinal metaplasia; 47 cases with no endoscopical intestinal metaplasia | Investigate the relationship between | Detection of mRNA glicentin expression in 100% of cases with endoscopical intestinal metaplasia, in 76,7% of cases with no endoscopical intestinal metaplasia | Ishihara | |
| Rats - glicentin IV infusion during the 5 min preceding food onset and during the first 15 min of food intake | Investigate the effect of a systemic increase of glicentin on food intake, postprandial myoelectrical activity in duodenum, jejunum and ileum and the oro-caecal transit | No effect of systemic injection of glicentin on food intake | Pellissier | |
| Dogs - use of vagally denervated gastric pouches equipped with four strain gauge force transducers on the pouch, gastric body, antrum and duodenum. Injection of glicentin intra-veinously | Explore the effect of glucagon, GLP-1, GLP-2 and glicentin on gastroduodenal motility and their mechanisms of action | Glicentin did not affect motilin-induced phase III contractions at any site | Shibata | |
| Rabbit, | Explore the effect of glicentin SMCs contraction isolated from the rabbit antrum | Induction of SMCs contraction by glicentin | Rodier | |
| Rabbit, | Describe the morphological and functional characteristics of a model of cultured digestive SMCs exhibiting a differentiated phenotype | Induction of SMCs contraction by glicentin | Jarousse | |
| Rabbit, | Investigate the modifications of the calcium/ phosphoinositide and the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) pathways in rabbit antral SMCs | Induction of SMCs contractions by glicentin | Rodier | |
| Human, | Investigate the enteric nervous responses to glicentin in the normal small bowel | Inhibition of contraction reaction by glicentin after blockade of the adrenergic and cholinergic nerve | Tomita | |
| Human, | Investigate the effect of glicentin on the motor activity of colon | Human SMCs from colon - dose-related contraction of SMCs induced by glicentin. Decrease of contractile activity induced by glicentin when incubated with exendin- ( | Ayachi | |
| Rats - use of chronic gastric fistulas, stimulation of gastric acid secretion by pentagastrin, injection of glicentin intra-veinously (bolus 3µg/kg, followed by 600 ng/h or 120 ng/h) | Investigate the role of glicentin on gastric acid secretion | Inhibition of gastric acid secretion by glicentin | Kirkegaard | |
| Rats, | Study the effect of glicentin on the glucose production and cAMP accumulation of isolated hepatocytes | Glicentin and glucagon stimulated the release of glucose from hepatocytes into the medium | Thieden | |
| Dogs - use of | Investigate the effect of glicentin-related peptides on the endocrine pancreatic function | Plasmatic concentrations after glicentin ( | Ohneda | |
| Dogs - use of | Study the role of glicentin-related peptides on the endocrine pancreas | Plasmatic concentrations after glicentin ( | Ohneda | |
| Dogs - use of | Explore the effect of human recombinant glicentin on the endocrine function of the pancreas | Plasmatic concentrations after glicentin administration at a dose of 100 pmol during glucose infusion - no significant change in blood glucose, slight increase of insulin, but not significant; no significant change of glucagon | Ohneda | |
| GLP 1/2 - glucagon like peptide 1 and 2. | ||||
Methodology used to measure fasting circulating glicentin concentrations in human
| Commercialized ELISA technique | Plasma | Patients who had acute pancreatitis | 6.2 | - | Pendharkar |
| Commercialized ELISA | Plasma | Lean adolescents (N = 19) | 17.6 (13 – 25) | - | Manell |
| Serum | Lean adults (N = 52) | 24 (18 - 38) | - | Raffort | |
| Adults with severe or morbid obesity before Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB) surgery (N = 18) | - | 14 ± 3.6 | Raffort | ||
| Non-commercialized sandwich ELISA | Plasma | Diabetic patients (N = 119) | - | 19.7 ± 2.1 | Naito |
| Very-low-birthweight infants (N = 21) | NV | NV | Shimizu | ||
| Children (N = 119) | NV | NV | Tadokoro | ||
| Non-commercialized radioimmunoassay and chromatography | Plasma | Non insulin-dependent diabetic patients (N = 8) | NV | NV | Orskov |
| RYGB: Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass. LSG: Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy. NV - no exact values. | |||||
Summary of studies on circulating glicentin variation in human
| - 83 patients who had acute pancreatitis: 30 developed abnormal glucose metabolism, 53 kept normal glucose metabolism | Explore the relationships between peptides known to be produced in both gut and brain and glucose metabolism in patients after acute pancreatitis | - Commercialized ELISA technique (Merck- Millipore®) | - Significant decrease in glicentin, oxyntomodulin, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) in individuals with abnormal glucose metabolism | Pendharkar |
| - 52 lean adults | Investigate serum glicentin concentrations during adult obesity and study its potential link with metabolic parameters | - Commercialized ELISA technique (Mercodia®) | - Significant decrease of glicentin concentration in patients with severe or morbid obesity compared to lean subjects | Raffort |
| - 30 adult patients with severe or morbid obesity, eligible to bariatric surgery: 18 patients had a Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB), 12 patients had a Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy (LSG), Follow-up at 3, 6 and 12 months post-surgery | Investigate fasting circulating glicentin variation in obese patients who underwent bariatric surgery | - Commercialized ELISA technique (Mercodia®) | - Significant increase of glicentin at 6 months post-surgery, with an effect more marked at 12 months | Raffort |
| - 19 lean adolescents | Explore fasting and postprandial plasma concentrations of the proglucagon- derived hormones (glucagon, glicentin, GLP-1) in adolescents with obesity | - Commercialized ELISA technique (Mercodia®) | - No significant difference on fasting glicentin concentrations between lean adolescents and adolescents with obesity and NGT. | Manell |
| - 21 very-low-birthweight infants: 11 infants had early feeding with breast milk within 24h after birth, 10 infants had breast milk more than 24h after birth | Explore the effects of early enteral feedings and the secretion of gut hormones in very-low- birthweight infants | - Non- commercialized sandwich ELISA | - Glicentin basal concentration: early feeding group: higher glicentin concentrations at day 5-6 and day 14 after birth than at day 1 – 2; control group: higher glicentin concentrations at day 14 after birth than at day 1 – 2; higher glicentin concentrations in the early feeding group compared to controls at day 5 - 6 and day 14 after birth | Shimizu |
| - 119 developing children: 21 children aged 15 to 29 days, 16 children aged 1 to 5 months, 14 children aged 6 to 11 months, 16 children aged 1 to 3 years, 17 children aged 4 to 7 years, 18 children aged 8 to 11 years, 17 children aged 12 to 15 years | Investigate the changes in basal plasma concentrations of glicentin in term and preterm developing children | - Non- commercialized sandwich ELISA | - Glicentin basal concentration: higher glicentin concentrations in children aged 15 to 29 days, 1 to 5 months versus children aged 1 to 3 years, 4 to 7 years, 8 to 11 years; higher glicentin concentrations in children aged 6 to 11 months versus children aged 1 to 3 years, 8 to 11 years, 12 to 15 years; higher glicentin concentrations in very-low-birthweight children versus normal birthweight children at day 1 or 2 after birth | Tadokoro |
| - 6 normal subjects | Explore plasma concentration of glicentin in diabetic and gastrectomized patients | - Non- commercialized sandwich ELISA | - Fasting glicentin concentration: no significant difference on plasma glicentin concentrations between normal subjects and diabetics; no correlation between glicentin concentrations and plasma glucose | Naito |
| - 8 noninsulin-dependent diabetics (T2D) | Identify stimuli involved in the secretion of glicentin and investigate the impact of disturbance in glucose metabolism | - Non- commercialized radioimmunoassay and chromatography | - Fasting glicentin: mean amount of total glucagon immunoreactivity eluting at 0.3 Kd (corresponding to the elution of porcine glicentin), lower in T2D than controls | Orskov |
| VIP - vasoactive intestinal peptide. HDL - high-density lipoprotein. LDL - low-density lipoprotein. RYGB - Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. LSG - laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy. NGT - normal glucose tolerance. IGT - impaired glucose tolerance. T2D - type 2 diabetes. GLP-1 - glucagon like peptide 1. OGTT - oral glucose tolerance test. | ||||