We conclude that islet macrophages are major contributors to islet IL-1β secretion in response to TLR2/6 and TLR4 ligands. BMDMs stimulated with TLR2/6 and TLR4 ligands reduce insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells, partly via IL-1β- and IL-6-mediated decreased insulin gene expression.
SummaryGiardia lamblia is a primitive eukaryotic microorganism that derives its metabolic energy primarily from anaerobic glycolysis. In trophozoites, pyruvate-ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFOR) converts pyruvate to acetylCoA with the transfer of a pair of electrons to ferredoxin, which can then reduce metronidazole and activate it into a potent antigiardiasis agent. It is unclear, however, whether this anaerobic disposal of electrons is essential for the energy metabolism in Giardia. In the present study, cDNAs encoding hammerhead ribozyme flanked with various lengths of antisense PFOR RNA were cloned into a viral vector pC631pac derived from the genome of giardiavirus (GLV). RNA transcripts of the plasmids showed high cleavage activities on PFOR mRNA in vitro. They were introduced into GLV-infected G. lamblia trophozoites by electroporation and stablized in the transfected cells via serial passages under puromycin selection. PFOR mRNA and enzyme activity in the transfected cells were decreased by 46±60% with the ribozyme PRzS flanked with 20 nt PFOR antisense RNA on each arm and by 69±80% with the ribozyme PRzL flanked with 600 and 1500 nt PFOR antisense RNA. PRzS without the inserted ribozyme or ribozyme flanked with alcohol dehydrogenase E antisense RNA showed no effect on PFOR mRNA and activity. The ribozyme-transfected cells demonstrated significantly enhanced resistance to metronidazole and grew equally well under anaerobic and aerobic conditions. In contrast, the wild-type cells grew slightly better anaerobically than the transfectants but did not grow at all in aerobic conditions. Thus, the reduced PFOR expression enables Giardia to grow under molecular oxygen and the presence of PFOR enhances the anaerobic growth of Giardia with an increased susceptibility towards metronidazole. In addition, this study demonstrated for the first time the feasibility of using a viral RNA vector to express a ribozyme targeted at a specific mRNA in G. lamblia to reduce the expression of a specific gene.
Ten antibody escape mutants of coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) were used to identify nucleotide substitutions that determine viral virulence for the heart and pancreas. The P1 region, encoding the structural genes of each mutant, was sequenced to identify mutations associated with the lack of neutralization. Eight mutants were found to have a lysine-to arginine mutation in the puff region of VP2, while two had a glutamate-to-glycine substitution in the knob of VP3. Two mutants, EM1 and EM10, representing each of these mutations, were further analyzed, initially by determining their entire sequence. In addition to the mutations in P1, EM1 was found to have two mutations in the 3D polymerase, while EM10 had a mutation in stem-loop II of the 5 nontranslated region (5NTR). The pathogenesis of the mutants relative to that of CVB3 strain RK [CVB3(RK)] then was examined in A/J mice. Both mutants were found to be less cardiotropic than the parental strain, with a 40-fold (EM1) or a 100-to 1,000-fold (EM10) reduction in viral titers in the heart relative to the titers of CVB3(RK). The mutations in VP2, VP3, and the 5NTR were introduced independently into the RK infectious clone, and the phenotypes of the progeny viruses were determined. The results substantiated that the VP2 and VP3 mutations reduced cardiovirulence, while the 5NTR mutation in EM10 was associated with a more virulent phenotype when expressed on its own. Stereographic imaging of the two mutations in the capsomer showed that they lie in close proximity on either side of a narrow cleft between the puff and the knob, forming a conformational epitope that is part of the putative binding site for coreceptor DAF.
The global health and economic burden of type 2 diabetes (T2D) has reached staggering proportions. Current projections estimate that 592 million people will have diabetes by 2035. T2D-which comprises 90% of cases-is a complex disease, in most cases resulting from a combination of predisposing genes and an unhealthy environment. Clinical onset of the disease occurs when pancreatic β cells fail in the face of insulin resistance. It has long been appreciated that chronic activation of the innate immune system is associated with T2D, and many organs critical to the regulation of glucose homeostasis show signs of a chronic inflammatory process, including the pancreatic islets of Langerhans. Recent clinical trials using IL-1-targeting agents have confirmed that inflammation contributes to β-cell failure in humans with T2D. However, little is known about the nature of the pro-inflammatory response within the islet, and there is considerable debate about the triggers for islet inflammation, which may be systemically derived and/or tissue-specific. In this review, we present evidence that Toll-like receptors 2 and 4 and the NLRP3 (Nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain, Leucine-rich Repeat and Pyrin domain containing 3) inflammasome are triggers for islet inflammation in T2D and propose that the activation of macrophages by these triggers mediates islet endocrine cell dysfunction. Therapeutically targeting these receptors may improve hyperglycemia and protect the β cell in T2D.
Macrophages play a dynamic role in tissue repair following injury. Here we found that following streptozotocin (STZ)-induced beta-cell death, mouse islet macrophages had increased Igf1 expression, decreased proinflammatory cytokine expression, and transcriptome changes consistent with macrophages undergoing efferocytosis and having an enhanced state of metabolism. Macrophages were the major, if not sole, contributors to islet insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) production. Adoptive transfer experiments showed that macrophages can maintain insulin secretion in vivo following beta-cell death with no effects on islet cell turnover. IGF-1 neutralization during STZ treatment decreased insulin secretion without affecting islet cell apoptosis or proliferation. Interestingly, high-fat diet (HFD) combined with STZ further skewed islet macrophages to a reparative state. Finally, islet macrophages from db/db mice also expressed decreased proinflammatory cytokines and increased Igf1 mRNA. These data have important implications for islet biology and pathology and show that islet macrophages preserve their reparative state following beta-cell death even during HFD feeding and severe hyperglycemia.
Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) is a common human pathogen that is endemic throughout the world. There is currently no vaccine available, although the virus is known to be highly lethal to newborns and has been associated with heart disease and pancreatitis in older children and adults. Previously, we showed that the virulence of CVB3 is reduced by a lysine-to-arginine substitution in the capsid protein VP2 (K2168R) or a glutamic acid-to-glycine substitution in VP3 (E3060G). In this report, we show that the double mutant virus CVB3(KR/EG) displays additional attenuation, particularly for the pancreas, in A/J mice. In addition, two other attenuating mutations have been identified in the capsid protein VP1. When either the aspartic acid residue D1155 was replaced with glutamic acid or the proline residue P1126 was replaced with methionine, the resulting mutant also possessed an attenuated phenotype. Moreover, when either of these mutations was incorporated into CVB3(KR/EG), the resulting triple mutant viruses, CVB3(KR/EG/DE) and CVB3(KR/EG/ PM), were completely noncardiovirulent and caused only small foci of damage to the pancreas, even at a high dose. Both triple mutants were found to be immunogenic, and a single injection of young A/J mice with either was found to protect them from a subsequent lethal challenge with wild-type CVB3. These findings indicate that the triple mutants could be exploited for the development of a live attenuated vaccine against CVB3.
Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) can induce antiviral enzyme 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetase (2'5'AS) expression and activate latent 2'5'AS. Our previous data have shown pancreatic β cells are sensitive to dsRNA-induced 2'5'AS expression, and constitutive high basal 2'5'AS expression is associated with susceptibility to developing type 1 diabetes (T1D), a disease due to pancreatic β cell loss. Here we report that in vitro transcribed human insulin mRNA induces the activation of human OAS gene promoter sequences, and specifically and dose-dependently induces 2'5'AS expression in murine pancreatic βTC3 cells. Over-expression of dsRNA receptor retinoic acid-inducible gene-1 enhances insulin mRNA-induced 2'5'AS expression. In vitro transcribed insulin and other mRNAs, as well as total cellular RNAs, activate latent 2'5'AS in vitro with activation ability likely associated with the sequence and length of individual mRNAs or the sample source of total cellular RNA. Insulin mRNA does not show any specificity to activate 2'5'AS, but total cellular RNA from βTC3 cells has high activation ability. Constitutive 2'5'AS expression in βTC3 cells leads to cell proliferation inhibition and apoptosis. Our study suggests the possibility of cellular RNA-regulated 2'5'AS expression and activation, and the potential risk of high insulin gene transcription in pancreatic β cells, and may help explain genetic predisposition to T1D associated with INS VNTR class I alleles.
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