Moak Shari L, Dougan Grace C, MarElia Catherine B, Danse Whitney A, Fernandez Amanda M, Kuehl Melanie N, Athanason Mark G, Burkhardt Brant R
Department of Cell Biology, Microbiology and Molecular Biology, University of South Florida, 4202 East Fowler Avenue, Tampa, FL 33620, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of South Florida, 12901 Bruce B. Downs Boulevard MDC 62, Tampa, FL 33612, USA.
Dis Model Mech. 2014 Nov;7(11):1307-15. doi: 10.1242/dmm.016402. Epub 2014 Sep 12.
Pancreatic-derived factor (PANDER; also known as FAM3B) is a uniquely structured protein strongly expressed within and secreted from the endocrine pancreas. PANDER has been hypothesized to regulate fasting and fed glucose homeostasis, hepatic lipogenesis and insulin signaling, and to serve a potential role in the onset or progression of type 2 diabetes (T2D). Despite having potentially pivotal pleiotropic roles in glycemic regulation and T2D, there has been limited generation of stable animal models for the investigation of PANDER function, and there are no models on well-established genetic murine backgrounds for T2D. Our aim was to generate an enhanced murine model to further elucidate the biological function of PANDER. Therefore, a pure-bred PANDER knockout C57BL/6 (PANKO-C57) model was created and phenotypically characterized with respect to glycemic regulation and hepatic insulin signaling. The PANKO-C57 model exhibited an enhanced metabolic phenotype, particularly with regard to enhanced glucose tolerance. Male PANKO-C57 mice displayed decreased fasting plasma insulin and C-peptide levels, whereas leptin levels were increased as compared with matched C57BL/6J wild-type mice. Despite similar peripheral insulin sensitivity between both groups, hepatic insulin signaling was significantly increased during fasting conditions, as demonstrated by increased phosphorylation of hepatic PKB/Akt and AMPK, along with mature SREBP-1 expression. Insulin stimulation of PANKO-C57 mice resulted in increased hepatic triglyceride and glycogen content as compared with wild-type C57BL/6 mice. In summary, the PANKO-C57 mouse represents a suitable model for the investigation of PANDER in multiple metabolic states and provides an additional tool to elucidate the biological function and potential role in T2D.
胰腺衍生因子(PANDER,也称为FAM3B)是一种结构独特的蛋白质,在胰腺内分泌细胞中大量表达并分泌。据推测,PANDER可调节空腹和进食状态下的葡萄糖稳态、肝脏脂肪生成和胰岛素信号传导,并在2型糖尿病(T2D)的发生或发展中发挥潜在作用。尽管PANDER在血糖调节和T2D中可能具有关键的多效性作用,但用于研究PANDER功能的稳定动物模型却很少,而且在成熟基因小鼠背景下没有T2D模型。我们的目的是构建一个增强型小鼠模型,以进一步阐明PANDER的生物学功能。因此,我们创建了一个纯种PANDER基因敲除的C57BL/6小鼠(PANKO-C57)模型,并对其血糖调节和肝脏胰岛素信号传导进行了表型特征分析。PANKO-C57模型表现出增强的代谢表型,尤其是葡萄糖耐量增强。与匹配的C57BL/6J野生型小鼠相比,雄性PANKO-C57小鼠空腹血浆胰岛素和C肽水平降低,而瘦素水平升高。尽管两组外周胰岛素敏感性相似,但在空腹状态下,肝脏胰岛素信号传导显著增强,表现为肝脏蛋白激酶B/蛋白激酶B(PKB/Akt)和腺苷酸活化蛋白激酶(AMPK)磷酸化增加,以及成熟的固醇调节元件结合蛋白-1(SREBP-1)表达增加。与野生型C57BL/6小鼠相比,胰岛素刺激PANKO-C57小鼠导致肝脏甘油三酯和糖原含量增加。总之,PANKO-C57小鼠是研究PANDER在多种代谢状态下的合适模型,并为阐明其生物学功能和在T2D中的潜在作用提供了一个额外的工具。