28 research outputs found
The hypotensive effect of acute and chronic AMP-activated protein kinase activation in normal and hyperlipidemic mice
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is present in the arterial wall and is activated in response to cellular stressors that raise AMP relative to ADP/ATP. Activation of AMPK in vivo lowers blood pressure but the influence of hyperlipidemia on this response has not been studied. ApoE-/- mice on high fat diet for 6 weeks and age-matched controls were treated with the AMPK activator, AICAR daily for two weeks. Under anesthesia, the carotid artery was cannulated for blood pressure measurements. Aortic tissue was removed for in vitro functional experiments and AMPK activity was measured in artery homogenates by Western blotting. ApoE-/- mice had significantly raised mean arterial pressure; chronic AICAR treatment normalized this but had no effect in normolipidemic mice, whereas acute administration of AICAR lowered mean arterial pressure in both groups. Chronic AICAR treatment increased phosphorylation of AMPK and its downstream target acetyl-CoA carboxylase in normolipidemic but not ApoE-/- mice. In aortic rings, AMPK activation induced vasodilation and an anticontractile effect, which was attenuated in ApoE-/- mice. This study demonstrates that hyperlipidemia dysregulates the AMPK pathway in the arterial wall but this effect can be reversed by AMPK activation, possibly through improving vessel compliance
Screening for Active Small Molecules in Mitochondrial Complex I Deficient Patient's Fibroblasts, Reveals AICAR as the Most Beneficial Compound
Congenital deficiency of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I (CI) is a common defect of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Despite major advances in the biochemical and molecular diagnostics and the deciphering of CI structure, function assembly and pathomechanism, there is currently no satisfactory cure for patients with mitochondrial complex I defects. Small molecules provide one feasible therapeutic option, however their use has not been systematically evaluated using a standardized experimental system. In order to evaluate potentially therapeutic compounds, we set up a relatively simple system measuring different parameters using only a small amount of patient's fibroblasts, in glucose free medium, where growth is highly OXPOS dependent. Ten different compounds were screened using fibroblasts derived from seven CI patients, harboring different mutations
Spreading of complex regional pain syndrome: not a random process
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) generally remains restricted to one limb but occasionally may spread to other limbs. Knowledge of the spreading pattern of CRPS may lead to hypotheses about underlying mechanisms but to date little is known about this process. The objective is to study patterns of spread of CRPS from a first to a second limb and the factors associated with this process. One hundred and eighty-five CRPS patients were retrospectively evaluated. Cox’s proportional hazards model was used to evaluate factors that influenced spread of CRPS symptoms. Eighty-nine patients exhibited CRPS in multiple limbs. In 72 patients spread from a first to a second limb occurred showing a contralateral pattern in 49%, ipsilateral pattern in 30% and diagonal pattern in 14%. A trauma preceded the onset in the second limb in 37, 44 and 91%, respectively. The hazard of spread of CRPS increased with the number of limbs affected. Compared to patients with CRPS in one limb, patients with CRPS in multiple limbs were on average 7 years younger and more often had movement disorders. In patients with CRPS in multiple limbs, spontaneous spread of symptoms generally follows a contralateral or ipsilateral pattern whereas diagonal spread is rare and generally preceded by a new trauma. Spread is associated with a younger age at onset and a more severely affected phenotype. We argue that processes in the spinal cord as well as supraspinal changes are responsible for spontaneous spread in CRPS
Metformin reduces liver glucose production by inhibition of fructose-1-6-bisphosphatase.
Metformin is a first-line drug for the treatment of individuals with type 2 diabetes, yet its precise mechanism of action remains unclear. Metformin exerts its antihyperglycemic action primarily through lowering hepatic glucose production (HGP). This suppression is thought to be mediated through inhibition of mitochondrial respiratory complex I, and thus elevation of 5'-adenosine monophosphate (AMP) levels and the activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), though this proposition has been challenged given results in mice lacking hepatic AMPK. Here we report that the AMP-inhibited enzyme fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase-1 (FBP1), a rate-controlling enzyme in gluconeogenesis, functions as a major contributor to the therapeutic action of metformin. We identified a point mutation in FBP1 that renders it insensitive to AMP while sparing regulation by fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (F-2,6-P2), and knock-in (KI) of this mutant in mice significantly reduces their response to metformin treatment. We observe this during a metformin tolerance test and in a metformin-euglycemic clamp that we have developed. The antihyperglycemic effect of metformin in high-fat diet-fed diabetic FBP1-KI mice was also significantly blunted compared to wild-type controls. Collectively, we show a new mechanism of action for metformin and provide further evidence that molecular targeting of FBP1 can have antihyperglycemic effects
Metabolic and vascular effects of AICA-riboside in humans
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87713.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, 11 november 2010Promotores : Tack, C.J.J., Smits, P. Co-promotor : Loon, L.J.C. van157 p
[High sensitivity to sulphonylurea treatment in 2 patients with maturity-onset diabetes of the young type 3]
Item does not contain fulltextIn 2 patients, a 26-year-old woman and a 47-year-old man, diabetes mellitus was diagnosed during their teens, although they had (almost) no symptoms at the time. Since then, the disease was well controlled in both patients with the use of tolbutamide at a low dose. Diabetes occurred in at least 3 generations of both patients' families, inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. Genetic screening in both individuals revealed two separate mutations in the HNF-1 alpha gene, confirming maturity-onset diabetes of the young type 3 (MODY-3). MODY-3 patients are unusually sensitive to the hypoglycaemic effects of sulphonylureas. These agents remain effective in these patients for years, even at low doses
[High sensitivity to sulphonylurea treatment in 2 patients with maturity-onset diabetes of the young type 3]
In 2 patients, a 26-year-old woman and a 47-year-old man, diabetes mellitus was diagnosed during their teens, although they had (almost) no symptoms at the time. Since then, the disease was well controlled in both patients with the use of tolbutamide at a low dose. Diabetes occurred in at least 3 generations of both patients' families, inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. Genetic screening in both individuals revealed two separate mutations in the HNF-1 alpha gene, confirming maturity-onset diabetes of the young type 3 (MODY-3). MODY-3 patients are unusually sensitive to the hypoglycaemic effects of sulphonylureas. These agents remain effective in these patients for years, even at low doses