4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Apoptotic signal transduction pathways in diabetes

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 66, Issue 8, Pages 1433-1440

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0006-2952(03)00494-5

Keywords

calcium; islet brain-1; interleukin-1; JNK; MAPK

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Failure of insulin producing pancreatic beta-cells is a common characteristic of type I (insulin-dependent) and type 2 (insulin non-dependent) diabetes mellitus. Accumulating evidence suggests that programmed cell death (apoptosis) is the main form of beta-cell death in these disorders. The beta-cell is particularly sensitive to apoptotic stimuli due to the inherent features of the specialized beta-cell phenotype. In type I diabetes anti-beta-cell autoimmune reactivity delivers the apoptotic signals in the form of inflammatory mediators or T-cell effectors. In type 2 diabetes, the metabolic derangement is associated with production of inflammatory mediators in insulin-sensitive tissues leading elevated levels of circulating inflammatory mediators such as IL-6 and TNF. Further glucose has been suggested to induce beta-cell apoptosis via the induction of beta-cell synthesis of IL-1 which via autocrine action may elicit signalling cascades analogous to those seen in beta-cell destruction in type I diabetes. Considering the apparent importance of IL-1-beta signalling in beta-cell failure in both type I and type 2 diabetes, we here review the modulatory effect exerted on IL-1 signalling by cellular characteristics related to the specialized beta-cell phenotype. We conclude that beta-cell differentiation signals (Pdx-1), glucose metabolism, calcium handling as well as regulation of naturally occurring inhibitors of cytokine signalling contribute to sensitize the beta-cell to apoptotic stimuli. We hypothesize that immunological stimuli in type 1 diabetes and metabolic/inflammatory signals in type 2 diabetes converge on common signalling pathways leading to beta-cell failure and destruction in these two diseases. (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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