47 research outputs found

    Two conserved domains in PCIF1 mediate interaction with pancreatic transcription factor PDX-1

    Get PDF
    AbstractPCIF1 is a TRAF and POZ domain containing nuclear factor that interacts with and inhibits transactivation of pancreatic homeodomain transcription factor PDX-1. Here, we demonstrate interaction of endogenous PDX-1 and PCIF1 in MIN6 insulinoma cells. Within PCIF1, the TRAF and POZ domains are both required for physical and functional interaction with the C-terminus of PDX-1, whereas the C-terminal domain of PCIF1 directs its nuclear localization. A human PDX-1 mutation associated with diabetes, E224K, disrupts the ability of PCIF1 to inhibit PDX-1 transactivation, suggesting that the interaction between PDX-1 and PCIF1 is required for normal glucose homeostasis. Inhibition of transactivation occurs by a mechanism distinct from the classical role of POZ domains to recruit co-repressors and histone deacetylases. Understanding the functional roles of PCIF1 domains may have application to therapeutic β-cell replacement strategies involving PDX-1 for the treatment of diabetes

    Insulin regulates carboxypeptidase E by modulating translation initiation scaffolding protein eIF4G1 in pancreatic β cells

    Get PDF
    Insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia, and hyperproinsulinemia occur early in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes (T2D). Elevated levels of proinsulin and proinsulin intermediates are markers of β-cell dysfunction and are strongly associated with development of T2D in humans. However, the mechanism(s) underlying β-cell dysfunction leading to hyperproinsulinemia is poorly understood. Here, we show that disruption of insulin receptor (IR) expression in β cells has a direct impact on the expression of the convertase enzyme carboxypeptidase E (CPE) by inhibition of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4 gamma 1 translation initiation complex scaffolding protein that is mediated by the key transcription factors pancreatic and duodenal homeobox 1 and sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1, together leading to poor proinsulin processing. Reexpression of IR or restoring CPE expression each independently reverses the phenotype. Our results reveal the identity of key players that establish a previously unknown link between insulin signaling, translation initiation, and proinsulin processing, and provide previously unidentified mechanistic insight into the development of hyperproinsulinemia in insulin-resistant states

    Characterization of novel mRNAs encoding enzymes involved in peptide alpha-amidation.

    No full text
    International audienceThe COOH-terminal alpha-amidation of bioactive peptides is a 2-step process catalyzed by two separable enzymatic activities both derived from the peptidylglycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase (PAM) precursor. Two forms of PAM mRNA (rPAM-1 and -2), differing by the presence or absence of optional Exon A, were previously characterized; both encode precursors predicted to have an NH2-terminal signal sequence, an intragranular domain containing both enzymatic activities, and a single transmembrane domain followed by a short, cytoplasmic COOH-terminal domain. In this report, two novel types of PAM mRNA were identified in adult rat atrium. A cDNA of each type was sequenced, and the results indicate that rPAM-3 and -4 could be related to each other and to the previously characterized rat PAM cDNAs by alternative mRNA splicing. Deletion of a 258-nucleotide segment (optional Exon B) encoding the transmembrane domain from rPAM-3 and the presence of a novel 3'-exon in rPAM-4 mean that both rPAM-3 and -4 mRNAs encode precursor proteins that have an NH2-terminal signal peptide but lack a transmembrane domain. The rPAM-4 precursor protein lacks the region of the PAM precursor catalyzing the second step in the alpha-amidation reaction. Low levels of rPAM-3 and -4 type mRNA were detected in atrium. Utilizing the polymerase chain reaction, two major patterns of distribution of forms of PAM mRNA were found. In the heart and central nervous system, PAM mRNAs both containing and lacking optional Exon A were prevalent and almost all of the PAM mRNAs detected contained optional Exon B. In the pituitary and submaxillary glands, PAM mRNAs lacking optimal Exon A were prevalent, as were PAM mRNAs lacking all or part of optional Exon B. Since the distribution of PAM activity between soluble and membrane fractions is tissue-specific and developmentally regulated and since rPAM-4 lacks an enzymatic portion of the PAM precursor, the tissue-specific expression of these forms of rat PAM mRNA is expected to be of functional significance

    Minireview: Meeting the Demand for Insulin: Molecular Mechanisms of Adaptive Postnatal ß-Cell Mass Expansion

    No full text
    Type 2 diabetes results from pancreatic ß-cell failure in the setting of insulin resistance. This model of disease progression has received recent support from the results of genome-wide association studies that identify genes potentially regulating ß-cell growth and function as type 2 diabetes susceptibility loci. Normal ß-cell compensation for an increased insulin demand includes both enhanced insulin-secretory capacity and an expansion of morphological ß-cell mass, due largely to changes in the balance between ß-cell proliferation and apoptosis. Recent years have brought significant progress in the understanding of both extrinsic signals stimulating ß-cell growth as well as mediators intrinsic to the ß-cell that regulate the compensatory response. Here, we review the current knowledge of mechanisms underlying adaptive expansion of ß-cell mass, focusing on lessons learned from experimental models of physiologically occurring insulin-resistant states including diet-induced obesity and pregnancy, and highlighting the potential importance of interorgan cross talk. The identification of critical mediators of islet compensation may direct the development of future therapeutic strategies to enhance the response of ß-cells to insulin resistance

    Identification of PCIF1, a POZ Domain Protein That Inhibits PDX-1 (MODY4) Transcriptional Activity

    No full text
    Hox factors are evolutionarily conserved homeodomain-containing transcription factors that activate and repress gene expression in a precise temporally and spatially regulated manner during development and differentiation. Pancreatic-duodenal homeobox 1 (PDX-1) is a Hox-type protein that is a critical requirement for normal pancreas development and for proper differentiation of the endocrine pancreas. In humans, PDX-1 gene mutation causes pancreatic agenesis and early- and late-onset type 2 diabetes. PDX-1 consists of an N-terminal transactivation domain, a homeodomain responsible for DNA binding and nuclear localization, and a conserved C terminus that is mutated in human diabetes but whose function is poorly understood. We have identified a novel POZ domain protein, PDX-1 C terminus-interacting factor 1 (PCIF1)/SPOP, that interacts with PDX-1 both in vitro and in vivo. PCIF1 is localized to the nucleus in a speckled pattern, and coexpression of PDX-1 alters the subnuclear distribution of PCIF1. Functionally, PCIF1 inhibits PDX-1 transactivation of established target gene promoters in a specific and dose-dependent manner that requires critical amino acids in the PDX-1 C terminus. PCIF1 is expressed in adult pancreatic insulin-producing β cells, and overexpression of PCIF1 inhibits the rat insulin 1 and rat insulin 2 promoters in the MIN6 insulinoma β cell line. The coexpression of PCIF1 with PDX-1 in β cells and the ability of PCIF1 to repress PDX-1 transactivation suggest that modulation of PDX-1 function by PCIF1 may regulate normal β cell differentiation

    On the origin of the β cell

    No full text
    The major forms of diabetes are characterized by pancreatic islet β-cell dysfunction and decreased β-cell numbers, raising hope for cell replacement therapy. Although human islet transplantation is a cell-based therapy under clinical investigation for the treatment of type 1 diabetes, the limited availability of human cadaveric islets for transplantation will preclude its widespread therapeutic application. The result has been an intense focus on the development of alternate sources of β cells, such as through the guided differentiation of stem or precursor cell populations or the transdifferentiation of more plentiful mature cell populations. Realizing the potential for cell-based therapies, however, requires a thorough understanding of pancreas development and β-cell formation. Pancreas development is coordinated by a complex interplay of signaling pathways and transcription factors that determine early pancreatic specification as well as the later differentiation of exocrine and endocrine lineages. This review describes the current knowledge of these factors as they relate specifically to the emergence of endocrine β cells from pancreatic endoderm. Current therapeutic efforts to generate insulin-producing β-like cells from embryonic stem cells have already capitalized on recent advances in our understanding of the embryonic signals and transcription factors that dictate lineage specification and will most certainly be further enhanced by a continuing emphasis on the identification of novel factors and regulatory relationships

    Origin of exocrine pancreatic cells from nestin-positive precursors in developing mouse pancreas

    No full text
    Abstract During pancreatic development, endocrine and exocrine cell types arise from common precursors in foregut endoderm. However, little information is available regarding regulation of pancreatic epithelial differentiation in specific precursor populations. We show that undifferentiated epithelial precursors in E10.5 mouse pancreas express nestin, an intermediate filament also expressed in neural stem cells. Within developing pancreatic epithelium, nestin is co-expressed with pdx1 and p48, but not ngn3. Epithelial nestin expression is extinguished upon differentiation of endocrine and exocrine cell types, and no nestin-positive epithelial cells are observed by E15.5. In E10.5 dorsal bud explants, activation of EGF signaling results in maintenance of undifferentiated nestin-positive precursors at the expense of differentiated acinar cells, suggesting a precursor/progeny relationship between these cell types. This relationship was confirmed by rigorous lineage tracing studies using nestin regulatory elements to drive Cre-mediated labeling of nestin-positive precursor cells and their progeny. These experiments demonstrate that a nestin promoter/enhancer element containing the second intron of the mouse nestin locus is active in undifferentiated E10.5 pancreatic epithelial cells, and that these nestin-positive precursors contribute to the generation of differentiated acinar cells. As in neural tissue, nestin-positive cells act as epithelial progenitors during pancreatic development, and may be regulated by EGF receptor activity.

    Development of type 2 diabetes following intrauterine growth retardation in rats is associated with progressive epigenetic silencing of Pdx1

    No full text
    Intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) has been linked to the onset of diseases in adulthood, including type 2 diabetes, and has been proposed to result from altered gene regulation patterns due to epigenetic modifications of developmental genes. To determine whether epigenetic modifications may play a role in the development of adult diabetes following IUGR, we used a rodent model of IUGR that expresses lower levels of Pdx1, a pancreatic and duodenal homeobox 1 transcription factor critical for β cell function and development, which develops diabetes in adulthood. We found that expression of Pdx1 was permanently reduced in IUGR β cells and underwent epigenetic modifications throughout development. The fetal IUGR state was characterized by loss of USF-1 binding at the proximal promoter of Pdx1, recruitment of the histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1) and the corepressor Sin3A, and deacetylation of histones H3 and H4. Following birth, histone 3 lysine 4 (H3K4) was demethylated and histone 3 lysine 9 (H3K9) was methylated. During the neonatal period, these epigenetic changes and the reduction in Pdx1 expression could be reversed by HDAC inhibition. After the onset of diabetes in adulthood, the CpG island in the proximal promoter was methylated, resulting in permanent silencing of the Pdx1 locus. These results provide insight into the development of type 2 diabetes following IUGR and we believe they are the first to describe the ontogeny of chromatin remodeling in vivo from the fetus to the onset of disease in adulthood
    corecore