9 research outputs found

    Carbamoyl-PROXYL-enhanced MRI detects very small disruptions in brain vascular permeability induced by dietary cholesterol.

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    BACKGROUND: Gd-DTPA-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a conventional method for non-invasive investigation of blood-brain-barrier (BBB) permeability in animal models. It allows the visualization of serious injury to the BBB. We developed a novel approach for detecting very small disruptions in BBB permeability induced by dietary cholesterol by using carbamoyl-PROXYL (CMP) as an MRI contrast probe.\nMETHODS: Mice were separated into two groups: normal diet (ND-mice) and high cholesterol diet (CD-mice). MRI-signal dynamics, plasma cholesterol, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP-9, MMP-2), and the white blood cell profile were analyzed. For the MRI analysis, two regions-of-interest (ROI) were selected: brain (ROI-1) and surrounding area (ROI-2).\nRESULTS: In the ROI-2 of ND-mice, CMP- or Gd-enhanced MRI-signal followed typical kinetics with a half-life of signal decay (t(1/2)) ~8 or ~15min, respectively. In CD-mice, the MRI-signal increased continuously without decay. In the ROI-1 of ND- and CD-mice, MRI-signal enhancement was not detected by Gd-DTPA. In the ROI-1 of ND-mice, CMP-induced MRI-signal enhancement was negligible, while in CD-mice, it was significant (t(1/2)>15min). Hypercholesterolemia increased the plasma levels of MMP-9 and neutrophils.\nCONCLUSIONS: Hypercholesterolemia increases vascular permeability, which is mediated by MMP-9 and neutrophils.\nGENERAL SIGNIFICANCE: Even very small disruptions in brain vascular permeability could be detected by CMP-enhanced MRI but not by Gd-DTPA-enhanced MRI

    Deficit of tRNALys modification by Cdkal1 causes the development of type 2 diabetes in mice

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    The worldwide prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D), which is caused by a combination of environmental and genetic factors, is increasing. With regard to genetic factors, variations in the gene encoding Cdk5 regulatory associated protein 1–like 1 (Cdkal1) have been associated with an impaired insulin response and increased risk of T2D across different ethnic populations, but the molecular function of this protein has not been characterized. Here, we show that Cdkal1 is a mammalian methylthiotransferase that biosynthesizes 2-methylthio-N6-threonylcarbamoyladenosine (ms2t6A) in tRNALys(UUU) and that it is required for the accurate translation of AAA and AAG codons. Mice with pancreatic β cell–specific KO of Cdkal1 (referred to herein as β cell KO mice) showed pancreatic islet hypertrophy, a decrease in insulin secretion, and impaired blood glucose control. In Cdkal1-deficient β cells, misreading of Lys codon in proinsulin occurred, resulting in a reduction of glucose-stimulated proinsulin synthesis. Moreover, expression of ER stress–related genes was upregulated in these cells, and abnormally structured ER was observed. Further, the β cell KO mice were hypersensitive to high fat diet–induced ER stress. These findings suggest that glucose-stimulated translation of proinsulin may require fully modified tRNALys(UUU), which could potentially explain the molecular pathogenesis of T2D in patients carrying cdkal1 risk alleles
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