3.8 Article

Oxidative stress and the JNK pathway as a potential therapeutic target for diabetes

Journal

DRUG NEWS & PERSPECTIVES
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages 447-453

Publisher

PROUS SCIENCE, SA
DOI: 10.1358/dnp.2004.17.7.863704

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Oxidative stress is produced under diabetic conditions and is likely involved in progression of pancreatic P-cell dysfunction found in diabetes. Possibly due to low levels of antioxidant enzyme expressions, P-cells are vulnerable to oxidative stress. When beta-cell-derived cell lines or isolated rat islets were exposed to oxidative stress, insulin gene expression was markedly decreased. Furthermore, when diabetic C57BL/ KsJ-db/db mice were treated with antioxidants, glucose tolerance was ameliorated. Histological analyses of the pancreata revealed that the P-cell mass is significantly larger in the mice treated with the antioxidants. The antioxidant treatment also preserved the amounts of insulin content and insulin mRNA. As a possible mechanism underlying the phenomena, expression of pancreatic and duodenal homeobox factor-1 (PDX-1), an important transcription factor for the insulin gene, was more clearly visible in the nuclei of islet cells after the antioxidant treatment. Furthermore, oxidative stress induces nucleocytoplasmic translocation of PDX-1 through activation of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathway, which leads to suppression of insulin gene expression. Taken together, oxidative stress and consequent activation of the JNK pathway are involved in progression of P-cell dysfunction found in diabetes, and thus are a therapeutic target for diabetes. (C) 2004 Prous Science. All rights reserved.

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