Affiliation:
1. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Washington , Seattle , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Context
Chronic exposure of pancreatic islets to elevated glucose levels causes progressive declines in beta cell Pdx-1 and insulin gene expression, and glucose-induced insulin secretion. This has been shown to be associated with excessive islet reactive oxygen species and consequent damage to beta cell function, a process termed glucose toxicity. In short-term rodent in vivo studies, Nrf2 (Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1:nuclear factor erythroid-derived-2 related factor complex) has been shown to play a central role in defending beta cells from oxidative damage via activation of antioxidant gene expression.
Objective
The current studies were primarily designed to examine the behavior of Nrf2 gene expression during longer term exposure of beta cells to glucose toxicity.
Methods and Results
We provide evidence that gene expression of Nrf2 in HIT-T15 cells, an insulin-secreting beta-cell line, undergoes a biphasic response characterized by an initial decrease followed by increased expression during prolonged culturing of these cells in a physiologic (0.8 mM) but not a supraphysiologic (16.0 mM) glucose concentration. This was associated with a slight rise in HO-1 gene expression. Pdx-1 and insulin mRNA levels also decreased but then stabilized in late passages of cells that had been cultured in low glucose concentrations.
Conclusion
These complex events support the concept that Nrf2 gene expression plays an important regulatory role in defending beta cells during prolonged exposure to oxidative stress.
Subject
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism