Gangliosides are sialic acid-containing glycosphingolipids that are present on all mammalian plasma membranes where they participate in recognition and signaling activities. We have established mutant mice that lack GM3 synthase (CMP-NeuAc:lactosylceramide ␣2,3-sialyltransferase; EC 2.4.99.-). These mutant mice were unable to synthesize GM3 ganglioside, a simple and widely distributed glycosphingolipid. The mutant mice were viable and appeared without major abnormalities but showed a heightened sensitivity to insulin. A basis for the increased insulin sensitivity in the mutant mice was found to be enhanced insulin receptor phosphorylation in skeletal muscle. Importantly, the mutant mice were protected from high-fat diet-induced insulin resistance. Our results show that GM3 ganglioside is a negative regulator of insulin signaling, making it a potential therapeutic target in type 2 diabetes.
To inhibit arthritis upstream of inflammatory cytokine release and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) action, we designed de novo a small-molecule inhibitor of c-Fos/activator protein-1 (AP-1) using three-dimensional (3D) pharmacophore modeling. This model was based on the 3D structure of the basic region-leucine zipper domain of AP-1-DNA complex. Administration of this inhibitor prevented type II collagen-induced arthritis from day 21, before the onset of arthritis, or from day 27, resolved arthritis after its onset. Suppression of disease was accomplished by reducing the amounts of inflammatory cytokines and MMPs in vivo in sera and joints and in vitro in synovial cell and chondrocyte cultures. The primary action of this molecule was the inhibition of matrix-degrading MMPs and inflammatory cytokines including interleukin 1beta; this molecule also synergized with anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha to inhibit arthritis. Thus, selective inhibition of c-Fos/AP-1 resolves arthritis in a preclinical model of the disease.
The mammalian clock genes, Period and Cryptochrome (Cry), regulate circadian rhythm. We show that circadian rhythmicity and rhythmic expression of Period in the nuclei of inflammatory synovial cells and spleen cells are disturbed in mouse models of experimental arthritis. Expressions of other clock genes, Bmal1 and Dbp, are also disturbed in spleen cells by arthritis induction. Deletion of Cry1 and Cry2 results in an increase in the number of activated CD3+ CD69+ T cells and a higher production of TNF-α from spleen cells. When arthritis is induced, Cry1−/−Cry2−/− mice develop maximal exacerbation of joint swelling, and upregulation of essential mediators of arthritis, including TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-6, and matrix metalloproteinase-3. Wee-1 kinase is solely upregulated in Cry1−/−Cry2−/− mice, in line with upregulation of c-Fos and Wee-1 kinase in human rheumatoid arthritis. The treatment with anti–TNF-α Ab significantly reduced the severity and halted the progression of the arthritis of Cry1−/−Cry2−/− mice and vice versa, ectopic expression of Cry1 in the mouse embryonic fibroblast from Cry1−/−Cry2−/− mice significantly reduced the trans activation of TNF-α gene. Thus, the biological clock and arthritis influence each other, and this interplay can influence human health and disease.
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