Recent advances in human islet transplantation have highlighted the need for expanding the pool of beta-cells available for transplantation. We have developed three transgenic models in which growth factors (hepatocyte growth factor [HGF], placental lactogen, or parathyroid hormone-related protein) have been targeted to the beta-cell using rat insulin promoter (RIP). Each displays an increase in islet size and islet number, and each displays insulin-mediated hypoglycemia. Of these three models, the RIP-HGF mouse displays the least impressive phenotype under basal conditions. In this study, we show that this mild basal phenotype is misleading and that RIP-HGF mice have a unique and salutary phenotype. Compared with normal islets, RIP-HGF islets contain more insulin per beta-cell (50 +/- 5 vs. 78 +/- 9 ng/islet equivalent [IE] in normal vs. RIP-HGF islets, P < 0.025), secrete more insulin in response to glucose in vivo (0.66 +/- 0.06 vs. 0.91 +/- 0.10 ng/ml in normal vs. RIP-HGF mice, P < 0.05) and in vitro (at 22.2 mmol/l glucose: 640 +/- 120.1 vs. 1,615 +/- 196.9 pg. microg protein(-1). 30 min(-1) in normal vs. RIP-HGF islets, P < 0.01), have two- to threefold higher GLUT2 and glucokinase steady-state mRNA levels, take up and metabolize glucose more effectively, and most importantly, function at least twice as effectively after transplantation. These findings indicate that HGF has surprisingly positive effects on beta-cell mitogenesis, glucose sensing, beta-cell markers of differentiation, and transplant survival. It appears to have a unique and unanticipated effective profile as an islet mass- and function-enhancing agent in vivo.
The function of the African swine fever virus (ASFV) bcl-2 homologue, gene A179L, in the regulation of apoptosis was investigated using as a model system the human myeloid leukemia cell line K562 induced to die by apoptosis with inhibitors of macromolecular synthesis, a process that is prevented by overexpression of human bcl-2. It is shown that transfection of K562 cells with the ASFV A179L gene protects these cells from apoptotic cell death induced by a combination of cycloheximide and actinomycin D or by treatment with cytosine arabinoside. To test the functional role of the highly conserved BH1 domain present in the A179L protein, the Gly residue at position 85 was mutated to Ala, since it has been shown that substitution of the corresponding Gly in human Bcl-2 abrogates its death-repressor activity. It was found that the Gly-to-Ala mutation in the BH1 domain of the viral protein abolished its capacity to protect the K562 cells from apoptosis, indicating that this Gly is essential for A179L action. This finding stresses the functional similarity of the BH1 domains of the viral protein and cellular Bcl-2.
In the 70% of patients with complete follow-up at 4 years, SES demonstrated sustained efficacy to reduce TLR with no difference in death, repeat myocardial infarction or stent thrombosis. (The Study to Assess AMI Treated With Balloon Angioplasty [TYPHOON]; NCT00232830).
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