Unacylated ghrelin and obestatin increase islet cell mass and prevent diabetes in streptozotocin-treated newborn rats
July 2010
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The ghrelin gene products, namely acylated ghrelin (AG), unacylated ghrelin (UAG), and obestatin (Ob), were shown to prevent pancreatic β-cell death and to improve β-cell function under treatment with cytokines, which are major cause of β-cell destruction in diabetes. Moreover, AG had been described previously to prevent streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes in rats; however, the effect of either UAG or Ob has never been examined in this context. In the present study, we investigated the potential of UAG and Ob to increase islet β-cell mass and to reduce diabetes at adult age in STZ-treated neonatal rats. One-day-old rats were injected with STZ and subsequently administered with either AG, UAG or Ob for 7 days. On day 70, plasma glucose levels, plasma and pancreatic insulin levels, pancreatic islet area and number, insulin and pancreatic/duodenal homeobox-1 (Pdx1) gene expression, and antiapoptotic BCL2 protein expression were determined. Similarly to AG, both UAG and Ob counteracted STZ-induced high glucose levels and improved plasma and pancreatic insulin levels, which were reduced by the diabetogenic compound. UAG and Ob increased islet area, islet number, and β-cell mass with respect to STZ treatment alone. Finally, in STZ-treated animals, UAG and Ob up-regulated insulin and Pdx1 mRNA and increased the expression of BCL2 similarly to AG. Taken together, our results suggest that in STZ-treated newborn rats, UAG and Ob improve glucose metabolism and preserve islet cell mass, granting a therapeutic potential in medical conditions associated with impaired β-cell function.
- article
- newborn
- priority journal
- controlled study
- animal experiment
- animal model
- animal tissue
- nonhuman
- gene expression
- diabetes mellitus
- rat
- real time polymerase chain reaction
- ghrelin
- glucose blood level
- glucose
- hormonal regulation
- insulin
- messenger RNA
- immunohistochemistry
- protein bcl 2
- cell protection
- obestatin
- cell death
- insulin release
- PDX1 gene
- cell destruction
- glucose homeostasis
- homeobox
- pancreas islet cell
- streptozocin diabetes