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Department of Metabolism, Nutrition and Hormones, Fundación Jiménez Díaz, Avda. Reyes Católicos, 2, 28040 Madrid, Spain
1 Laboratory of Experimental Hormonology, Brussels Free University, Brussels, Belgium
(Requests for offprints should be addressed to M L Villanueva-Peñacarrillo; Email: mlvillanueva{at}fjd.es)
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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In fat tissue, where the GLP-1 pancreatic receptor does not seem to be expressed (Bullock et al. 1996), the peptide also has specific binding sites (Mérida et al. 1993, Valverde et al. 1993), and is both lipogenic and lipolytic, apart from showing capability to stimulate parameters related to glucose metabolism (Ruiz-Grande et al. 1992, Perea et al. 1997, Wang et al. 1997, Miki et al. 1996, Villanueva-Peñacarrillo et al. 2001a).
Exendin(139)amide (Ex-4), a non mammalian peptide, shares 53% of its amino acid sequence with GLP-1; it is also insulinotropic (Cancelas et al. 2001a) and exerts GLP-1-like effects in rat liver and skeletal muscle, such as stimulation of glycogen synthase
, glycogen synthesis and glucose oxidation and utilization (Alcántara et al. 1997). Its truncated form, exendin(939) amide (Ex-9), has been shown to be an antagonist of the GLP-1 receptor in various cell systems (Nielsen et al. 2004), and also of its effects in rat pancreas (Cancelas et al. 2001b), liver cells and muscle tissue (Alcántara et al. 1997). But in human myocytes, both exendins increase glucose transport (González et al. 2005) and metabolism (Luque et al. 2002), and have been shown to be agonists of the GLP-1 receptor in adipocyte (Montrose-Rafizadeh et al. 1997) and myocyte (Yang et al. 1998) cell lines.
GLP-1 increases phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) activity and phosphorylation of protein kinase B (PKB), p44/42 MAP kinases (p44/42 MAPKs) and p70s6 kinase (p70s6k) in human myocytes (González et al. 2005) and in rat hepatocytes (Redondo et al. 2003) and skeletal muscle (Acitores et al. 2004), as insulin does in rat hepatocytes (Redondo et al. 2003, Peak et al. 1998) and human myocytes (González et al. 2005). In human muscle cells, Ex-4 and Ex-9 both share with GLP-1 its stimulatory action on PI3K/PKB and p44/42 MAPK enzymes (González et al. 2005) although with an apparent lower potency.
Recent reports have drawn attention to the participation of several kinases in the metabolic response of both human and rat myocytes to GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 (González et al. 2005), and the perturbation of this coupling process in type-2 diabetes mellitus (Acitores et al. 2004, González et al. 2004). The aim of the present study was to investigate in normal rat adipocytes the effect of GLP-1, Ex4 and Ex-9, compared with that of insulin or glucagon, on the activity of PI3K, PKB, p70s6k and p42/p44 MAP kinases and the role of these enzymes in the action of GLP-1 and both exendins on 2-deoxy-D-glucose transport and lipid metabolism. As some metabolic responses to insulin are known to be impaired in diabetic states, together with the fact that GLP-1 and Ex-4 are currently under investigation as possible therapeutic tools, we extended the study to adipocytes from adult animals that had been injected with streptozotocin during the neonatal period (STZ-rats) - a current model of type-2 diabetes (Portha et al. 1979).
| Materials and methods |
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The following reagents were used: human GLP-1(736) amide (GLP-1; Bachem AG, Bubendorf, Switzerland); porcine insulin (Novo Biolabs, Bagsvaerd, Denmark); porcine glucagon (Lilly Co., Indianapolis, IN, USA); exendin(139)amide (Ex-4) and exendin(939)amide (Ex-9) (gifts from Dr John Eng, Veterans Administration Medical Center, NY, USA); PD98059 (PD) and RO318220 (RO) (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA, USA); collagenase P (Roche Diagnostics GmbH, Mannheim, Germany); ethylenedinitrilotetraacetic acid (EDTA), bovine serum albumin (BSA), 1-(5-isoquinolinylsulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine (H-7), rapamycin (RAP), wortmannin, cytochalasin B, glycerol, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine (Sigma Chemical Co., St Louis, MO, USA); streptozotocin (STZ) (Sigma-Aldrich Química S.A., Madrid, Spain); aprotinin (Trasylol, Bayer Leverkusen, Germany); 2-deoxy-D-[1,2-3H(N)]glucose (2-DOG; Moravek Biochemicals, Brea, CA, USA); [2-14C]sodium acetate (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, UK); dioctyl phthalate (Acros Organics, Fair Lawn, NJ, USA); Ultima Gold scintillation liquid (Packard, Gröninger, The Netherlands); adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) (Boehringer Mannheim, S.A., Barcelona, Spain); [
32P]ATP (30 Ci/nmol), horseradish peroxidase-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit immunoglobulin, Rainbow markers, ECL-Western blotting kit, Hyperfilm ECL (Amersham Biosciencies, UK); rabbit anti-total and anti-phosphorylated form of p44/42 MAP kinases, p70s6k and PKB (Cell Signaling Technology, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA, USA); and rabbit anti-PI3-kinase p85 (Upstate Biotechnology, Lake Placid, NY, USA). All other commonly used chemicals were from Sigma or Merck (Merck Pharma Quimica, S.A., Barcelona, Spain).
Experimental animals
Male Wistar rats, kept on a standard pellet diet (UAR, Panlab, Barcelona, Spain) and tap water which were both available ad libitum, were used. Rats were rendered diabetic by a single dose of streptozotocin (STZ, 100 µg/g body weight (bw)) dissolved in 25 µl 0.05 M Na citrate, pH 4.5, intraperitoneally administered on the day of birth (Portha et al. 1979); at the age of 67 weeks, those animals showing a glucose disappearance constant (K) below 2.5 x 102 min1 during an i.v. glucose tolerance test (0.5 mg glucose/g bw, in 30 s) were selected (Vicent et al. 1994). A total of 38 STZ-induced type-2 diabetic rats (STZ-rats) were used in this study. Their body weights and K values averaged 257 ± 9 g and 1.56 ± 0.11 x 102 min1 respectively.
Cells
Adipocytes were isolated at 37 °C, by enzymatic digestion with collagenase P, from the rat epidydymal fat pads (Rodbell et al. 1964). Then, cells were resuspended in Krebs-Ringer Bicarbonate buffer supplemented with HEPES, Trasylol, BSA and without or with D-glucose, pH 7.4, at a density of 106 cells/ml.
Kinase activity
Cells (106) were first incubated for 15 min in 1 ml KRB containing 30 mM HEPES, 500 KIU/ml Trasylol, 1% BSA, and 3.3 mM D-glucose, pH 7.4, followed by a 3-min incubation in the absence or additional presence of GLP-1, Ex-4, Ex-9 or insulin. For the measurement of PI3K activity and that of phosphorylated PKB, p70s6k and p44/42 MAPKs, the cells were homogenized and maintained at 4 °C in 1.25% Triton containing 250 mM sucrose, 20 mM Tris/HCl, pH 7.6, 2.5 mM MgCl2, 50 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 1.2 mM EGTA, 5 mM Na4P2O7, 50 mM NaF, 1 mM Na3VO4, 30 U/ml bacitracin, 2 µM leupeptin, 2 µM pepstatin and 2 mM PMSF. After centrifugation at 10 000 g, the infranatant, containing cytosol and solubilized membranes, was kept at 70 °C until assay. An aliquot volume was taken from all membrane preparation samples for protein content determination (Bradford 1976).
PI3K activity was estimated as Phosphatidyl Inositol Phosphate (PIP2) phosphorylation to PIP3, in p85 immunoprecipitates obtained by treating each adipocyte membrane preparation with anti-PI3-kinase p85 and subsequent coupling to protein A-agarose. The immunoprecipitates were incubated for 20 min at room temperature with 20 µM [
32ATP] (5 µCi/nmol) in 6.25 mM HEPES, 5 mM MgCl2 and 0.25 mM EGTA, and in the presence of 0.25 mg/ml phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylserine as substrate; the reaction was interrupted by addition of 400 µl chloroform/methanol/HCl (1:2:1, v/v), 150 µl chloroform and 150 µl HCl. After centrifugation (10 000 g), the organic phase was treated with an equal volume of methanol/100 mM HCl/2.5 mM EDTA (1:1:1, v/v), and the new organic phase was separated by centrifugation and then speed-vac dried. The lipidic extract, redissolved in chloroform, was spotted, together with PIP3 standard, on a silicagel TLC plate, and developed in n-propanol/acetic acid/H2O (66:2:33, v/v). Plates were dried, and radioactive PIP3 was subsequently visualized by autoradiography and analyzed by densitometric scanning. In all experiments, the densitometric measurement of the band corresponding to cells incubated in the absence of peptide, was used as the control value (Redondo et al. 2003).
For the measurements of the degree of phosphorylation of the respective protein kinases by immunoblotting, equal amounts of each solubilized membrane preparation sample were subjected to SDS-PAGE (Laemmli 1970) on an 8% resolving gel, in parallel with molecular weight markers; the separated proteins were then transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane, in a semidry system (Trans-blot SD semidry transfer cell, BioRad). For immunodetection, a Western blotting kit was used following the manufacturers instructions, using total and phosphorylated antibody for each protein kinase, and a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit immunoglobulin second antibody; detection was by the enhanced chemiluminescence method, and quantitation was by densitometric scanning of the autoradiography (Redondo et al. 2003). The densitometric measurement of the phosphorylated protein kinase was normalized with respect to that of the total (percent of phosphorylated/total kinase), and the value obtained in adipocytes incubated in the absence of peptide was used as the control value.
Glucose transport
Cells (105) were incubated for 15 min at 37 °C in 400 µl KRB, 10.9 mM HEPES, 500 KIU/ml Trasylol and 2% BSA, pH 7.4, and either without (basal) or with GLP-1, Ex-4, Ex-9 or insulin alone or combined with 106 M wortmannin (a PI3K inhibitor), 2.5 x 105 M PD (a p44/42 MAPKs inhibitor), 107 M RAP (a p70s6k inhibitor), 104 M H-7 or 107 M RO (PKC inhibitors). This was followed by a 3-min incubation in the additional presence of 0.2 µCi (6.5 pmol) 2-deoxy- D-[1,2-3H(N)]glucose (final concentration 16.3 nM 2-DOG). Adipocytes, after being separated at 10 900 g in 100 µl dioctyl phthalate, were added to 3 ml scintillation liquid for ß-counting. The total D-glucose content was corrected for the unspecific D-glucose uptake value, obtained in cell samples from each experiment treated in parallel with 0.175 mM cytochalasin B (Perea et al. 1997).
Lipolysis
Lipolysis was determined as glycerol release, following Wielands enzymatic procedure (Wieland 1963), with some modifications (Perea et al. 1995). In brief, isolated adipocytes (105 cells) were incubated for 60 min at 37 °C, in 300 µl KRB supplemented with 10.9 mM HEPES, 500 KIU/ml Trasylol, 3.3 mM D-glucose and 3% BSA, and in the absence (basal) or presence of GLP-1, Ex-4, Ex-9 or glucagon alone or in combination, and without and with 106 M wortmannin (a PI3K inhibitor), 2.5 x 105 M PD (a p44/42 MAPKs inhibitor), 107 M RAP (a p70s6k inhibitor), 104 M H-7 or 107 M RO (PKC inhibitors); then, 0.45 M HClO4 was added to the media, and the mixture was maintained for 10 min at 4 °C and centrifuged at 2000 g; the supranatant was pH neutralized with 20% KCO3H, separated at 3000 g, and its glycerol content was spectrophotometrically measured as NADH produced in the presence of ATP, NAD and the appropriate enzymes, from the absorption at 340 nm; known amounts of glycerol were used as standards of reference.
Lipogenesis
Lipogenesis was judged from the incorporation of [2-14C]Na acetate, as precursor, into lipids. Adipocytes (105 cells) were incubated at 37 °C for 15 min in 400 µl KRB, 10.9 mM HEPES, 500 KIU/ml Trasylol, 3.3 mM D-glucose and 3% BSA, pH 7.4, and without (basal) or with GLP-1, Ex-4, Ex-9 or insulin alone or combined with 106 M wortmannin (PI3K inhibitor), 2.5 x 105 M PD (p44/42 MAPKs inhibitor), 107 M RAP (p70s6k inhibitor), 104 M H-7 or 107 M RO (PKC inhibitors). This was followed by a 60-min incubation at 37 °C in the additional presence of 0.4 mM [2-14C]Na acetate (0.156 µCi/µmol). Adipocytes, after being separated at 10 900 g in 100 µl dioctyl phthalate, were added to 3 ml scintillation liquid for ß-counting; the blank value was measured in vials containing all reagents but no cells and subjected in parallel to the same procedure.
Statistical study
All data are presented as mean values (± S.E.M.) together with either the number of individual determinations (n) or degrees of freedom (d.f.). The statistical significance of differences were determined using either analysis of variance or the Students t-test.
| Results |
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In adipocytes from normal rats, the response of the kinases (other than PI3K) to 1012 M and 109 M GLP-1 was not significantly different; with PI3K, on the other hand, while there was no effect of GLP-1 at the 1012 M dose, there was a higher and significant (P<0.005) increase at 109 M GLP-1 (Table 1
). At 109 M, the effect of GLP-1 was not different from that found with either Ex-4 or Ex-9. Pooling together the results obtained with GLP-1 and exendins, the stimulation of enzyme phosphorylation was not different from that found with 109 M insulin in the case of p44 MAPK and p70s6k, it was higher (P<0.02) in the case of PI3K, and lower (P<0.05) in that of p42 MAPK. Moreover, whilst insulin highly increased PKB activity (P<0.001), GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 inhibited (P<0.001) such a phosphorylation to 74 ± 5% (n=18) of basal value.
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Uptake of 2-deoxy-D-[1,2-3H]glucose
In normal rats, the basal value for D-glucose net uptake averaged 27.2 ± 0.8 fmol/105 cells (n=476). Relative to the mean basal value recorded within the same experiment(s), the readings in the presence of GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 (all 109 M) averaged, respectively, 148.5 ± 3.8% (n=165), 144.1 ± 3.5% (n=129) and 147.8 ± 4.0% (n=186); although these values were not significantly different from one another, the overall mean value (147.0 ± 2.2%; n=480) was slightly, but significantly (P<0.025) lower than that recorded in the case of insulin (157.4 ± 4.1%; n=151). Likewise, when comparing the readings recorded within the same experiment(s), those obtained in the presence of GLP-1 (160 ± 9%; n=46), Ex-4 (167 ± 13%; n=16) and Ex-9 (156 ± 9%; n=57) yielded an overall mean percentage of 159 ± 6% (n=119), as distinct (P<0.02) from 191 ± 12% (n=34) in the presence of insulin. The concentrationresponse relationships (Fig. 1
) for the effect of insulin, GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 were essentially comparable; thus, the threshold value was close to 1012 to 1011 M, and a maximal response was reached at 109 to 108 M.
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As shown in Fig. 2
, wortmannin, PD and H-7 abolished, as a rule, the response to insulin, GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 (109 M in all cases), the measurements made in the presence of both the agonist and the potential inhibitor being not significantly different from those in the presence of the inhibitor alone. The sole exception was in the case of wortmannin and Ex-4, when the value, although lower (P<0.001) than that recorded in the presence of Ex-4 alone, remained somewhat higher (P<0.001) than that found in the presence of wortmannin alone. The two other potential inhibitors (RAP and RO) failed to affect significantly the response to insulin, GLP-1, Ex-4 or Ex-9.
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Lipolysis
In normal rats, the basal value for lipolysis averaged 19.2 ± 0.6 nmol glycerol/105 cells (n=194). Both GLP-1 and Ex-4 exerted a stimulatory effect (Fig. 3
), with respective threshold concentrations close to 1012 M and 1011 M. The highest mean values recorded at 109 M GLP-1 (193 ± 9%; n=33) and Ex-4 (189 ± 12%; n=22) were not different from one another. When examined within the same experiment(s), the response to 109 M GLP-1 did not differ (d.f.=20; P>0.8) from the response to 109 M glucagon. At 1011 M, Ex-4 stimulated lipolysis (P<0.001) and increased the response to GLP-1 (1013, 1012 and 1011 M), the readings recorded in the presence of both agents averaging 113.3 ± 1.9% (n=33; P<0.001) of the corresponding mean values recorded in the presence of GLP-1 alone (100.0 ± 1.5%; n=22); this resulted, relative to the basal value, in an increment of 17.0 ± 3.1% (d.f.=61; P<0.001).
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Basal lipolysis was not significantly affected by wortmannin, PD, RAP or RO (Table 2
) but was decreased (P<0.001) by H-7. All five potential inhibitors reduced (P<0.05) the GLP-1-stimulated lipolysis; however, the values recorded in the presence of both GLP-1 and wortmannin, PD or RAP remained significantly higher (P<0.005) than those obtained in the presence of these agents alone. Such was not the case (P>0.1) with H-7 and RO. The response to Ex-4 was abolished by wortmannin and PD, while RAP, H-7 and RO failed to suppress it, the readings recorded in the presence of these three agents alone averaged 85 ± 3% (n=40; P<0.001) of that found in their absence (100 ± 2%; n=39). In the presence of H-7 and glucagon, lipolysis also remained slightly higher (P<0.01) than that in the presence of the inhibitor alone.
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Lipogenesis
In adipocytes from normal rats, the basal rate of lipogenesis averaged 2.34 ± 0.15 nmol/105 cells (n=214). It was enhanced (Table 3
) by 109 M GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 (all P<0.001), these effects were not significantly different from one another (P>0.05), but were significantly lower (P<0.001) than that recorded in the presence of 109 M insulin. As judged from the concentration/response relationships illustrated in Fig. 4
, the threshold concentration was lower with Ex-9 than with Ex-4. In the former case, there was only a very slight trend (r=0.1724; d.f.=100; P<0.09) for a positive correlation between the rate of lipogenesis and Ex-9 concentration (logarithmic scale). With both Ex-4 and Ex-9, however, no obvious indication of a dual response was observed. Apparently, a concentration of 109 M was sufficient for GLP-1, Ex-4 or Ex-9 to cause a maximal lipogenic response; thus, the effects of 109 M GLP-1 (131 ± 6% of basal value; n=18), Ex-4 (134 ± 6%; n=16) and Ex-9 (143 ± 8%; n=12) were not significantly different from one another or from those recorded in the concomitant presence of GLP-1 and either Ex-4 (137 ± 7%; n=15) or Ex-9 (139 ± 11%; n=12). Nevertheless, the overall mean value of these five sets of measurements (136 ± 3%; n=73) remained significantly lower (P<0.02) than that recorded with 109 M insulin (156 ± 9%; n=20).
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A comparable situation prevailed in the case of RAP, which decreased (P<0.001) the response to the agonists under consideration to 83.9 ± 1.6% (n=106) of the mean corresponding values found in its absence. In the case of GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9, the residual lipogenesis averaged 97.4 ± 2.0% (n=89; P>0.15) of that in the presence of RAP alone; in the case of insulin, however, such a percentage amounted to 134.6 ± 3.8 (n=17; P<0.001). However, the inhibitory action of RAP on insulin-stimulated lipogenesis failed to achieve statistical significance. Likewise, H-7 failed to affect the response to insulin, at variance with the response to GLP-1, Ex-4 or Ex-9.
Lastly, RO did not significantly decrease the lipogenic response to insulin or even that to GLP-1, whilst that in the presence of both RO and Ex-4, but not RO and Ex-9, remained significantly higher (P<0.001) than that recorded in the presence of RO alone.
For all five inhibitors tested in these experiments, the mean highest lipogenic effect, expressed relative to basal value, was always recorded in cells exposed to insulin (140.4 ± 4.9%; n=119). Lower readings (P<0.001) were always obtained with these inhibitors in the presence of either GLP-1 (106.9 ± 3.3%; n=117) or Ex-4 (106.5 ± 3.1%; n=171). Lastly, the lowest values were, as a rule, recorded in the presence of Ex-9 (92.2 ± 1.9%; n=132), well below (P<0.001) that found with either GLP-1 or Ex-4.
In adipocytes from STZ-diabetic rats, major differences were found with those of normal animals: the basal value for lipogenesis (5.01 ± 0.58 nmol/105 cells; n=33) was higher (P<0.001), and the readings recorded in the presence of 109 M insulin (172 ± 7%; n=27), relative to basal value, appeared somewhat higher (P<0.01) than in normal rats (151 ± 2%; n=247). Also, in sharp contrast to the situation found in adipocytes from normal rats, no enhancing action upon lipogenesis was detected with either GLP-1, Ex-4 or Ex-9, when tested at either 1012 M or 109 M, the results yielding an overall mean value of 92.5 ± 2.0% (n=190), slightly but significantly (P<0.001) lower than unity.
| Discussion |
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The comparable effects of GLP-1 and Ex-4 on enzyme phosphorylation in normal rat adipocytes paralleled the effects on 2-deoxy- D-glucose transport. The same was observed for Ex-9, in contrast with its antagonistic character upon the GLP-1 receptor in the beta-cell and other cell systems (Nielsen et al. 2004) and similar to the effect on 3T3 L1 adipocytes (Montrose-Rafizadeh et al. 1997) and myocytes (Yang et al. 1998). Also it is in accordance with its GLP-1-like action upon glucose transport (González et al. 2005) and metabolism (Luque et al. 2002) in human myocytes. All this indicates tissue and/or species differences in the effects of Ex-9 and its mechanism of action. Moreover, the potential inhibitors of enzyme activity, wortmannin and PD, abolished, as a rule, the effects of insulin, GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 on glucose transport, as it occurs in human myocytes (González et al. 2005). Such was not the case, however, with RAP, suggesting a more important role for PI3K, MAPKs and possibly PKC than for p70s6K in the control of hexose transport in fat tissue. The postulated involvement of PI3K is further supported by the fact that its increased basal activity in STZ-rats coincided with a higher basal value of 2-deoxy- D-glucose uptake. Likewise, the participation of MAPKs in the regulation of D-glucose transport is consistent with the finding that, in the STZ-rats, the altered effect of insulin on p42 and p44 MAPK phosphorylation occurs together with a preferential impairment of its action on glucose uptake; in fact, insulin, as distinct from GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9, showed both a higher threshold concentration for stimulation of glucose transport and a lower relative magnitude of the metabolic response to higher concentrations of the hormone.
As a general rule, H-7 also abolished the effect of insulin and that of GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 on D-glucose uptake, as previously observed (except for Ex-9) in human myocytes (González et al. 2005). RO, a staurosporine derivative and potent bisindolylmaleimide inhibitor of mainly
, ßI, ßII,
and
PKC isoforms (Wilkinson et al. 1993), was ineffective on the action of the four hormones/peptides tested, the effect on that of GLP-1 and insulin coinciding with a previous observation in human myocytes (González et al. 2005), and different from that detected on D-glucose metabolism in rat hepatocytes (Redondo et al. 2003). Although nothing definite can be concluded as to whether there are one or several PKC isoforms (Davies et al. 2000) involved in the respective effect of these hormones/peptides, these data do not exclude the possibility of PKC participating in the cellular signaling mechanism of their action.
A different situation prevailed as far as the regulation of lipolysis in normal rat adipocytes is concerned. Indeed, GLP-1 and Ex-4, but not Ex-9, stimulated glycerol release, thus mimicking the effect of glucagon rather than that of insulin. Ex-9 opposed the lipolytic action of GLP-1 and Ex-4, in accordance with its antagonistic character on the GLP-1 receptor and its effects in other cell systems (Nielsen et al. 2004). Such a lipolytic action was also suppressed, in part at least, by the potential inhibitors of PI3K and MAPKs activity, suggesting that the lipolytic effect of GLP-1 and Ex-4 occurs through activation of either of these two kinases. In adipocytes from STZ-rats, and except for a somewhat higher basal rate of lipolysis (other investigators could not detect any difference in human fat cells (Yu et al. 1997)), the lipolytic response to GLP-1, Ex-4 and glucagon was essentially comparable to that in normal rats.
In adipocytes from normal rats, GLP-1, Ex-4 and also Ex-9 again mimicked, albeit to a somewhat lesser relative extent, the positive effect of insulin on lipogenesis, Ex-9, unexpectedly displaying a very low threshold concentration (
1013 M). The sensitivity to the tested inhibitors of kinase activity was lowest in the case of insulin-stimulated lipogenesis and highest in that of Ex-9. Another striking difference between the lipogenic effect of insulin and that of GLP-1 and both exendins consisted in the fact that, in STZ-rats which showed a higher basal value than that in normal animals, no stimulation by GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 was observed, whilst insulin exerted an increase that was slightly higher than that in normal animals. This more active lipogenic action of insulin in STZ-rats is in accordance with data obtained in type-2 diabetic patients (Lange et al. 1988), but is in contrast with a report in a type-2 diabetic mouse model (Hedeskov et al. 1992). With respect to the present data, there was a close analogy between the opposite effects of GLP-1, Ex-4 and Ex-9 on both PKB phosphorylation and lipogenesis in normal versus diabetic rats, which may suggest a counter regulatory role for this kinase in the hormonal control of lipid generation. This view is further supported by the finding that the higher relative magnitude of lipogenesis induced by insulin in STZ-rats, as compared with normal animals, coincided with a higher relative increment of PKB, as well as PI3K and p70s6K activity.
In summary, the knowledge that certain enzymes are involved in the metabolic responses of the adipocyte to GLP-1 and exendins in STZ-rats, and the fact that the effect of insulin upon some of them is impaired in this diabetic model, adds further information about the mechanism of the overall beneficial action of GLP-1 and Ex-4, whose effects are being currently studied as an alternative therapeutic tool in human diabetes.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Funding |
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This study was supported by grants from the Ministerio de Educación y Cultura (BFI 200307399) and the Institute of Health Carlos III (G03/212 and C03/08), Spain. V S, M V T and N G are Research Fellows from the Fundación Conchita Rábago de Jiménez Díaz. The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest that would prejudice the impartiality of the reported research.
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Received 28 April 2005
Accepted 4 May 2005
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