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Regulation of Glut-4 Expression in Skeletal Muscle cells: The Roles of Nuclear Respiratory Factor-1 and calcium/calmodulin dependent protein Kinase

GLUT4 protein is the major glucose transporter in skeletal muscle and is vital in the maintenance of euglycemia (17; 108). Underexpression of GLUT4 or impairement of its translocation from intracellular compartments to the cell surface, are linked to diminished glucose transport, hyperglycemia and type II diabetes (59; 61; 153). Type II diabetes can be alleviated by increasing GLUT4 expression (223). Previous reports have shown that overexpression of NRF-1 and activation of CaMKII increases GLUT4 expression but the mechanisms involved have not be characterized (10; 173). Therefore, the objective of this thesis was to investigate the molecular mechanisms by which NRF-1 and CaMK II regulate GLUT4 expression in C2C12 myocytes. We engineered C2C12 cells that overexpressed NRF-1 in response to doxycycline (Dox) using a Tet-On gene expression system and assessed the effects of NRF-1 overexpression on: a) MEF2A, GLUT4 and δALAS proteins by western blot, and b) the binding of NRF-1 to mef2a and δalas genes and MEF2A to the glut4 gene, by chromatin immunoprecipitation assay (ChIP). The importance of MEF2A in NRF-1-induced increase in GLUT4 expression was investigated by silencing MEF2A expression using small interference RNA (siRNA). CaMK II was activated in wild-type C2C12 myocytes using 10 mM caffeine and was inhibited by 25 ÎΒΌ M KN93. Acetylation of histones in the vicinity of NRF-1 and MEF2A binding sites on the mef2a and glut4 genes, respectively, were assessed by ChIP assay. HDAC5 nuclear export was assessed by immunocytochemistry and mRNA levels by qRT-PCR. Overexpression of NRF-1 resulted in ~3-fold increases in mef2a-bound NRF-1 and glut4 -bound MEF2A at 6 h and 8 h post Dox treatment, respectively. MEF2A and GLUT4 proteins were both increased ~1.6-fold at 6 h and 18 h post Dox treatment. Silencing of MEF2A caused a marked downregulation of GLUT4 expression in NRF-1-overexpressing cells.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uct/oai:localhost:11427/3272
Date January 2010
CreatorsMukwevho, Emmanuel
ContributorsOjuka, Edward
PublisherUniversity of Cape Town, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Human Biology
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDoctoral Thesis, Doctoral, PhD
Formatapplication/pdf

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