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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Manipulating proglucagon processing in the pancreatic alpha-cell for the treatment of diabetes

Wideman, Rhonda D. 05 1900 (has links)
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) has received much attention as a novel diabetes therapeutic due to its pleotropic blood glucose-lowering effects, including enhancement of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, inhibition of gastric emptying and glucagon secretion, and promotion of beta-cell survival and proliferation. GLP-1 is produced in the intestinal L-cell via processing of the proglucagon precursor by prohormone convertase (PC) 1/3. Proglucagon is also expressed in the pancreatic alpha-cell; however, in this tissue PC2 is typically expressed instead of PC1/3, resulting in differential cleavage of proglucagon to yield glucagon as the major product. We hypothesized that expression of PC1/3 in the alpha-cell would induce GLP-1 production in this tissue, and that this intervention would improve islet function and survival. Initial studies in alpha-cell lines demonstrate that adenoviral delivery of PC1/3 to alpha-cells increases GLP-1 production. By encapsulating and transplanting either PC1/3- or PC2-expressing alpha-cells, the following studies show that while PC2-expressing alpha-cells increase fasting blood glucose and impair glucose tolerance, PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells decrease fasting blood glucose and dramatically improve glucose tolerance in normal mice and in mouse models of diabetes. We further show that transplantation of PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells prevents streptozotocin (STZ)- induced hyperglycemia. We also found that PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells also improve cold-induced thermogenesis in db/db mice, demonstrating a previously unappreciated effect of one or more of the PC1/3-derived proglucagon products. Studies in isolated mouse islets demonstrate that adenoviral delivery of PC1/3 to isolated islets increases islet GLP-1 secretion and improves glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and islet survival. Experiments with diabetic mice show that these GLP-1-producing islets are better able to restore normoglycemia in recipient mice following islet transplantation. Taken together, these studies demonstrate that the alpha-cell can be induced to process proglucagon into PC1/3-derived products, and that this shift redirects the alpha-cell from a hyperglycemia-promoting fate to a blood glucose-lowering one. This research opens up avenues for further investigating the therapeutic potential of inducing islet GLP-1 production in isolated human islets and in vivo in diabetes patients, and may represent a novel way to intervene in the progressive loss of beta-cells that characterizes diabetes.
2

Manipulating proglucagon processing in the pancreatic alpha-cell for the treatment of diabetes

Wideman, Rhonda D. 05 1900 (has links)
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) has received much attention as a novel diabetes therapeutic due to its pleotropic blood glucose-lowering effects, including enhancement of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, inhibition of gastric emptying and glucagon secretion, and promotion of beta-cell survival and proliferation. GLP-1 is produced in the intestinal L-cell via processing of the proglucagon precursor by prohormone convertase (PC) 1/3. Proglucagon is also expressed in the pancreatic alpha-cell; however, in this tissue PC2 is typically expressed instead of PC1/3, resulting in differential cleavage of proglucagon to yield glucagon as the major product. We hypothesized that expression of PC1/3 in the alpha-cell would induce GLP-1 production in this tissue, and that this intervention would improve islet function and survival. Initial studies in alpha-cell lines demonstrate that adenoviral delivery of PC1/3 to alpha-cells increases GLP-1 production. By encapsulating and transplanting either PC1/3- or PC2-expressing alpha-cells, the following studies show that while PC2-expressing alpha-cells increase fasting blood glucose and impair glucose tolerance, PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells decrease fasting blood glucose and dramatically improve glucose tolerance in normal mice and in mouse models of diabetes. We further show that transplantation of PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells prevents streptozotocin (STZ)- induced hyperglycemia. We also found that PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells also improve cold-induced thermogenesis in db/db mice, demonstrating a previously unappreciated effect of one or more of the PC1/3-derived proglucagon products. Studies in isolated mouse islets demonstrate that adenoviral delivery of PC1/3 to isolated islets increases islet GLP-1 secretion and improves glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and islet survival. Experiments with diabetic mice show that these GLP-1-producing islets are better able to restore normoglycemia in recipient mice following islet transplantation. Taken together, these studies demonstrate that the alpha-cell can be induced to process proglucagon into PC1/3-derived products, and that this shift redirects the alpha-cell from a hyperglycemia-promoting fate to a blood glucose-lowering one. This research opens up avenues for further investigating the therapeutic potential of inducing islet GLP-1 production in isolated human islets and in vivo in diabetes patients, and may represent a novel way to intervene in the progressive loss of beta-cells that characterizes diabetes.
3

Manipulating proglucagon processing in the pancreatic alpha-cell for the treatment of diabetes

Wideman, Rhonda D. 05 1900 (has links)
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) has received much attention as a novel diabetes therapeutic due to its pleotropic blood glucose-lowering effects, including enhancement of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, inhibition of gastric emptying and glucagon secretion, and promotion of beta-cell survival and proliferation. GLP-1 is produced in the intestinal L-cell via processing of the proglucagon precursor by prohormone convertase (PC) 1/3. Proglucagon is also expressed in the pancreatic alpha-cell; however, in this tissue PC2 is typically expressed instead of PC1/3, resulting in differential cleavage of proglucagon to yield glucagon as the major product. We hypothesized that expression of PC1/3 in the alpha-cell would induce GLP-1 production in this tissue, and that this intervention would improve islet function and survival. Initial studies in alpha-cell lines demonstrate that adenoviral delivery of PC1/3 to alpha-cells increases GLP-1 production. By encapsulating and transplanting either PC1/3- or PC2-expressing alpha-cells, the following studies show that while PC2-expressing alpha-cells increase fasting blood glucose and impair glucose tolerance, PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells decrease fasting blood glucose and dramatically improve glucose tolerance in normal mice and in mouse models of diabetes. We further show that transplantation of PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells prevents streptozotocin (STZ)- induced hyperglycemia. We also found that PC1/3-expressing alpha-cells also improve cold-induced thermogenesis in db/db mice, demonstrating a previously unappreciated effect of one or more of the PC1/3-derived proglucagon products. Studies in isolated mouse islets demonstrate that adenoviral delivery of PC1/3 to isolated islets increases islet GLP-1 secretion and improves glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and islet survival. Experiments with diabetic mice show that these GLP-1-producing islets are better able to restore normoglycemia in recipient mice following islet transplantation. Taken together, these studies demonstrate that the alpha-cell can be induced to process proglucagon into PC1/3-derived products, and that this shift redirects the alpha-cell from a hyperglycemia-promoting fate to a blood glucose-lowering one. This research opens up avenues for further investigating the therapeutic potential of inducing islet GLP-1 production in isolated human islets and in vivo in diabetes patients, and may represent a novel way to intervene in the progressive loss of beta-cells that characterizes diabetes. / Medicine, Faculty of / Cellular and Physiological Sciences, Department of / Graduate

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