495 research outputs found

    Somatostatin: Diverse Physiological Roles and Therapeutic Implications

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    In its brief lifetime as a known peptide, somatostatin has provided a truly remarkable story filled with surprising developments from unexpected quarters. The foundation was set in 1969, when Krulich and McCann reported that fractions of a crude hypothalamic extract inhibited the secretion of growth hormone. In 1973, Guillemin\u27s laboratory reported the sequence and synthesis of a fourteen amino acid peptide with the same inhibitory effect. It occurs in both a cyclic and linear form, each displaying equal biological activity. Somatostatin was assigned as its name, but it is also commonly referred to as growth hormone release inhibitory factor (GHRIF) or somatotropin-release inhibiting factor (SRIF)

    Induction of remission in diabetes by lowering blood glucose

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    As diabetes continues to grow as major health problem, there has been great progress in understanding the important role of pancreatic beta-cells in its pathogenesis. Diabetes develops when the normal interplay between insulin secretion and the insulin sensitivity of target tissues is disrupted. With type 2 diabetes (T2D), glucose levels start to rise when beta-cells are unable to meet the demands of insulin resistance. For type 1 diabetes (T1D) glucose levels rise as beta-cells are killed off by autoimmunity. In both cases the increased glucose levels have a toxic effect on beta-cells. This process, called glucose toxicity, has a major inhibitory effect on insulin secretion. This beta-cell dysfunction can be reversed by therapies that reduce glucose levels. Thus, it is becoming increasingly apparent that an opportunity exists to produce a complete or partial remission for T2D, both of which will provide health benefit

    An Appreciation of Robert Turner

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    Transplanted Beta Cell Response to Increased Metabolic Demand Changes in Beta Cell Replication and Mass

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    Abstract We determined the capacity of transplanted beta cells to modify their replication and mass when stimulated by changes in metabolic demand. Invest. 1994Invest. . 93:1577Invest. -158

    Sustained NF-κB Activation and Inhibition in β-Cells Have Minimal Effects on Function and Islet Transplant Outcomes

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    The activation of the transcription factor NF-κB leads to changes in expression of many genes in pancreatic β-cells. However, the role of NF-κB activation in islet transplantation has not been fully elucidated. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the state of NF-κB activation would influence the outcome of islet transplantation. Transgenic mice expressing a dominant active IKKβ (constitutively active) or a non-degradable form of IκBα (constitutive inhibition) under control of the rat insulin promoter were generated. Islets from these mice were transplanted into streptozotocin diabetic mice in suboptimal numbers. Further, the effects of salicylate (an inhibitor of NF-κB) treatment of normal islets prior to transplantation, and the effects of salicylate administration to mice prior to and after islet implantation were evaluated. Transplantation outcomes were not affected using islets expressing a non-degradable form of IκBα when compared to wild type controls. However, the transplantation outcomes using islets isolated from mice expressing a constitutively active mutant of NF-κB were marginally worse, although no aberrations of islet function in vitro could be detected. Salicylate treatment of normal islets or mice had no effect on transplantation outcome. The current study draws attention to the complexities of NF-κB in pancreatic beta cells by suggesting that they can adapt with normal or near normal function to both chronic activation and inhibition of this important transcription factor
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