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1.
Am J Physiol ; 277(4): E760-71, 1999 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10516137

ABSTRACT

In diabetes, activation of the aldose reductase (AR) pathway and alterations of glucose-sensitive signal transduction pathways have been implicated in depletion of intracellular taurine, an endogenous antioxidant and compatible osmolyte. Cellular taurine accumulation occurs by an osmotically induced, protein kinase C (PKC)-regulated Na(+)-taurine cotransporter (hTT). The effects of ambient glucose on taurine content, hTT activity, and hTT gene expression were therefore evaluated in low and high AR-expressing human retinal pigment epithelial cell lines. In low AR-expressing cells, 20 mM glucose decreased taurine content, hTT transporter activity, and mRNA levels, and these effects were unaffected by AR inhibition (ARI). In these cells, the inhibitory effects of high glucose on hTT appeared to be posttranscriptionally mediated, because 20 mM glucose decreased hTT mRNA stability without affecting hTT transcriptional rate. Inhibition of PKC overcame the decrease in hTT activity in high glucose-exposed cells. In high AR-expressing cells, prolonged exposure to 20 mM glucose resulted in intracellular taurine depletion, which paralleled sorbitol accumulation and was prevented by ARI. In these cells exposed to 5 mM glucose, hTT mRNA abundance was decreased and declined further in 20 mM glucose but was corrected by ARI. In 5 mM glucose, hTT transcriptional rate was markedly decreased in high AR-expressing cells, did not decline further in 20 mM glucose, but was increased by ARI to levels above those observed in low AR-expressing cells. Therefore, glucose rapidly and specifically decreases taurine content, hTT activity, and mRNA abundance by AR-unrelated and AR-related posttranscriptional and transcriptional mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Carrier Proteins/metabolism , Glucose/pharmacology , Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Membrane Transport Proteins , Pigment Epithelium of Eye/metabolism , Aldehyde Reductase/genetics , Carrier Proteins/genetics , Cells, Cultured , Down-Regulation , Gene Expression , Humans , Intracellular Membranes/metabolism , Kinetics , Membrane Glycoproteins/genetics , Pigment Epithelium of Eye/cytology , Pigment Epithelium of Eye/enzymology , RNA Stability/drug effects , RNA, Messenger/chemistry , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Signal Transduction/physiology , Sorbitol/metabolism , Taurine/metabolism , Transcription, Genetic/drug effects
2.
Am J Physiol ; 276(6): C1325-37, 1999 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10362595

ABSTRACT

myo-Inositol is a ubiquitous intracellular organic osmolyte and phosphoinositide precursor maintained at millimolar intracellular concentrations through the action of membrane-associated Na+-myo-inositol cotransporters (SMIT). Functional cloning and expression of a canine SMIT cDNA, which conferred SMIT activity in Xenopus oocytes, predicted a 718-amino acid peptide homologous to the Na+-glucose cotransporter with a potential protein kinase A phosphorylation site and multiple protein kinase C phosphorylation sites. A consistent approximately 1.0- to 13.5-kb array of transcripts hybridizing with this cDNA are osmotically induced in a variety of mammalian cells and species, yet SMIT activity appears to vary among different tissues and species. An open reading frame on human chromosome 21 (SLC5A3) homologous to that of the canine cDNA (96.5%) is thought to comprise an intronless human SMIT gene. Recently, this laboratory ascribed multiply sized, osmotically induced SMIT transcripts in human retinal pigment epithelial cells to the alternate utilization of several 3'-untranslated SMIT exons. This article describes an alternate splice donor site within the coding region that extends the open reading frame into the otherwise untranslated 3' exons, potentially generating novel SMIT isoforms. In these isoforms, the last putative transmembrane domain is replaced with intracellular carboxy termini containing a novel potential protein kinase A phosphorylation site and multiple protein kinase C phosphorylation sites, and this could explain the heterogeneity in the regulation and structure of the SMIT.


Subject(s)
Alternative Splicing , Carrier Proteins/genetics , Heat-Shock Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins , Symporters , Amino Acid Sequence/genetics , Animals , Base Sequence/genetics , Cells, Cultured , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/physiology , Dogs , Exons/genetics , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , Oocytes/metabolism , Open Reading Frames/genetics , Protein Isoforms/genetics , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Transcription, Genetic/genetics , Xenopus
3.
Am J Physiol ; 274(5): C1215-25, 1998 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9612208

ABSTRACT

Na(+)-myo-inositol cotransport activity generally maintains millimolar intracellular concentrations of myo-inositol and specifically promotes transepithelial myo-inositol transport in kidney, intestine, retina, and choroid plexus. Glucose-induced, tissue-specific myo-inositol depletion and impaired Na(+)-myo-inositol cotransport activity are implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications, a process modeled in vitro in cultured human retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells. To explore this process at the molecular level, a human RPE cDNA library was screened with a canine Na(+)-dependent myo-inositol cotransporter (SMIT) cDNA. Overlapping cDNAs spanning 3569 nt were cloned. The resulting cDNA sequence contained a 2154-nt open reading frame, 97% identical to the canine SMIT amino acid sequence. Genomic clones containing SMIT exons suggested that the cDNA is derived from at least five exons. Hypertonic stress induced a time-dependent increase, initially in a 16-kb transcript and subsequently in 11.5-, 9.8-, 8.5-, 3.8-, and approximately 1.2-kb SMIT transcripts, that was ascribed to alternate exon splicing using exon-specific probes and direct cDNA sequencing. The human SMIT gene is a complex multiexon transcriptional unit that by alternate exon splicing generates multiple SMIT transcripts that accumulate differentially in response to hypertonic stress.


Subject(s)
Alternative Splicing/genetics , Carrier Proteins/genetics , Heat-Shock Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins , Symporters , Transcription, Genetic/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Chromosome Mapping , Cloning, Molecular , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Dogs , Exons/genetics , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , RNA/genetics
4.
J Clin Invest ; 97(3): 736-45, 1996 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8609230

ABSTRACT

Defective tissue perfusion and nitric oxide production and altered myo-inositol metabolism and protein kinase C activation have been invoked in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications including neuropathy. The precise cellular compartmentalization and mechanistic interrelationships of these abnormalities remain obscure, and nitric oxide possesses both neurotransmitter and vasodilator activity. Therefore the effects of ambient glucose and myo-inositol on nitric oxide-dependent cGMP production and protein kinase C activity were studied in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells, a cell culture model for peripheral cholinergic neurons. D-Glucose lowered cellular myo-inositol content, phosphatidylinositol synthesis, and phosphorylation of an endogenous protein kinase C substrate, and specifically reduced nitric oxide-dependent cGMP production a time- and dose-dependent manner with an apparent IC50 of approximately 30 mM. The near maximal decrease in cGMP induced by 50 mM D-glucose was corrected by the addition of protein kinase C agonists or 500 microM myo-inositol to the culture medium, and was reproduced by protein kinase C inhibition or downregulation, or by myo-inositol deficient medium. Sodium nitroprusside increased cGMP in a dose-dependent fashion, with low concentrations (1 microM) counteracting the effects of 50 mM D-glucose or protein kinase C inhibition. The demonstration that elevated D-glucose diminishes basal nitric oxide-dependent cGMP production by myo-inositol depletion and protein kinase C inhibition in peripheral cholinergic neurons provides a potential metabolic basis for impaired nitric oxide production, nerve blood flow, and nerve impulse conduction in diabetes.


Subject(s)
Cyclic GMP/biosynthesis , Glucose/pharmacology , Nitric Oxide/pharmacology , Peripheral Nervous System/metabolism , Base Sequence , Cholinergic Fibers/drug effects , Cholinergic Fibers/metabolism , Diabetic Neuropathies/etiology , Glucose/analogs & derivatives , Humans , Inositol/pharmacology , Models, Neurological , Molecular Sequence Data , Neuroblastoma , Nitric Oxide Synthase/antagonists & inhibitors , Peripheral Nervous System/drug effects , Peripheral Nervous System/enzymology , Protein Kinase C/metabolism , Sorbitol/metabolism , Tumor Cells, Cultured
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