Publications
Protein kinase Czeta activation mediates glucagon-like peptide-1-induced pancreatic beta-cell proliferation
Abstract
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), an insulinotropic and glucoincretin hormone, is a potentially important therapeutic agent in the treatment of diabetes. We previously provided evidence that GLP-1 induces pancreatic beta-cell growth nonadditively with glucose in a phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI-3K)-dependent manner. In the present study, we investigated the downstream effectors of PI-3K to determine the precise signal transduction pathways that mediate the action of GLP-1 on beta-cell proliferation. GLP-1 increased extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and protein kinase B activities nonadditively with glucose in pancreatic beta(INS 832/13) cells. GLP-1 also caused nuclear translocation of the atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) zeta isoform in INS as well as in dissociated normal rat beta-cells as shown by immunolocalization and Western immunoblotting analysis. Tritiated thymidine incorporation measurements showed that the p38 MAPK inhibitor SB203580 suppressed GLP-1-induced beta-cell proliferation. Further investigation was performed using isoform-specific pseudosubstrates of classical (alpha, beta, and gamma) or zeta aPKC isoforms. The PKCzeta pseudosubstrate suppressed the proliferative action of GLP-1, whereas the inhibitor of classical PKC isoforms had no effect. Overexpression of a kinase-dead PKCzeta acting as a dominant negative protein suppressed GLP-1-induced proliferation. In addition, ectopic expression of a constitutively active PKCzeta mutant stimulated tritiated thymidine incorporation to the same extent as GLP-1, and the glucoincretin had no growth-promoting action under this condition. The data indicate that GLP-1-induced activation of PKCzeta is implicated in the beta-cell proliferative signal of the insulinotropic hormone. The results are consistent with a model in which GLP-1-induced PI-3K activation results in PKCzeta translocation to the nucleus, which may play a role in the pleiotropic effects (DNA synthesis, metabolic enzymes, and insulin gene expression) of the glucoincretin.
Type | Journal |
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ISBN | 0012-1797 (Print) |
Authors | Buteau, J.;Foisy, S.;Rhodes, C. J.;Carpenter, L.;Biden, T. J.;Prentki, M. : |
Publisher Name | DIABETES |
Published Date | 2001-01-01 |
Published Volume | 50 |
Published Issue | 10 |
Published Pages | 2237-43 |
Status | Published in-print |
URL link to publisher's version | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=11574404 |