oligomycins and Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-2

oligomycins has been researched along with Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-2* in 5 studies

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for oligomycins and Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-2

ArticleYear
Effect of excess iron on oxidative stress and gluconeogenesis through hepcidin during mitochondrial dysfunction.
    The Journal of nutritional biochemistry, 2015, Volume: 26, Issue:12

    Excessive tissue iron levels are a risk factor for insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes, which are associated with alterations in iron metabolism. However, the mechanisms underlying this association are not well understood. This study used human liver SK-HEP-1 cells to examine how excess iron induces mitochondrial dysfunction and how hepcidin controls gluconeogenesis. Excess levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and accumulated iron due to iron overload induced mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to a decrease in cellular adenosine triphosphate content and cytochrome c oxidase III expression, with an associated increase in gluconeogenesis. Disturbances in mitochondrial function caused excess iron deposition and unbalanced expression of iron metabolism-related proteins such as hepcidin, ferritin H and ferroportin during the activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein alpha (C/EBPα), which are responsible for increased phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase expression. Desferoxamine and n-acetylcysteine ameliorated these deteriorations by inhibiting p38 MAPK and C/EBPα activity through iron chelation and ROS scavenging activity. Based on experiments using hepcidin shRNA and hepcidin overexpression, the activation of hepcidin affects ROS generation and iron deposition, which disturbs mitochondrial function and causes an imbalance in iron metabolism and increased gluconeogenesis. Repression of hepcidin activity can reverse these changes. Our results demonstrate that iron overload is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and that together they can cause abnormal hepatic gluconeogenesis. Hepcidin expression may modulate this disorder by regulating ROS generation and iron deposition.

    Topics: Animals; Cation Transport Proteins; Cell Line; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Electron Transport Complex IV; Ferritins; Gluconeogenesis; Hepcidins; Humans; Iron; Iron Overload; Male; MAP Kinase Signaling System; Mice; Mitochondria; Oligomycins; Oxidative Stress; p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases; Reactive Oxygen Species; RNA, Small Interfering

2015
Mitochondrial dysfunction leads to impairment of insulin sensitivity and adiponectin secretion in adipocytes.
    The FEBS journal, 2013, Volume: 280, Issue:4

    Adipocytes play an integrative role in the regulation of energy metabolism and glucose homeostasis in the human body. Functional defects in adipocytes may cause systemic disturbance of glucose homeostasis. Recent studies revealed mitochondrial abnormalities in the adipose tissue of patients with type 2 diabetes. In addition, patients with mitochondrial diseases usually manifest systemic metabolic disorder. However, it is unclear how mitochondrial dysfunction in adipocytes affects the regulation of glucose homeostasis. In this study, we induced mitochondrial dysfunction and overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by addition of respiratory inhibitors oligomycin A and antimycin A and by knockdown of mitochondrial transcription factor A (mtTFA), respectively. We found an attenuation of the insulin response as indicated by lower glucose uptake and decreased phosphorylation of Akt upon insulin stimulation of adipocytes with mitochondrial dysfunction. Furthermore, the expression of glucose transporter 4 (Glut4) and secretion of adiponectin were decreased in adipocytes with increased ROS generated by defective mitochondria. Moreover, the severity of insulin insensitivity was correlated with the extent of mitochondrial dysfunction. These results suggest that higher intracellular ROS levels elicited by mitochondrial dysfunction resulted in impairment of the function of adipocytes in the maintenance of glucose homeostasis through attenuation of insulin signaling, downregulation of Glut4 expression, and decrease in adiponectin secretion. Our findings substantiate the important role of mitochondria in the regulation of glucose homeostasis in adipocytes and also provide a molecular basis for the explanation of the manifestation of diabetes mellitus or insulin insensitivity in a portion of patients with mitochondrial diseases such as MELAS or MERRF syndrome.

    Topics: 3T3-L1 Cells; Adipocytes; Adiponectin; Animals; Antimycin A; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; DNA-Binding Proteins; Electron Transport; Electron Transport Complex IV; Gene Knockdown Techniques; Glucose; Glucose Transporter Type 4; High Mobility Group Proteins; Insulin; Insulin Resistance; Mice; Mitochondria; Oligomycins; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt; Reactive Oxygen Species; RNA, Small Interfering

2013
A novel high-throughput assay for islet respiration reveals uncoupling of rodent and human islets.
    PloS one, 2012, Volume: 7, Issue:5

    The pancreatic beta cell is unique in its response to nutrient by increased fuel oxidation. Recent studies have demonstrated that oxygen consumption rate (OCR) may be a valuable predictor of islet quality and long term nutrient responsiveness. To date, high-throughput and user-friendly assays for islet respiration are lacking. The aim of this study was to develop such an assay and to examine bioenergetic efficiency of rodent and human islets.. The XF24 respirometer platform was adapted to islets by the development of a 24-well plate specifically designed to confine islets. The islet plate generated data with low inter-well variability and enabled stable measurement of oxygen consumption for hours. The F1F0 ATP synthase blocker oligomycin was used to assess uncoupling while rotenone together with myxothiazol/antimycin was used to measure the level of non-mitochondrial respiration. The use of oligomycin in islets was validated by reversing its effect in the presence of the uncoupler FCCP. Respiratory leak averaged to 59% and 49% of basal OCR in islets from C57Bl6/J and FVB/N mice, respectively. In comparison, respiratory leak of INS-1 cells and C2C12 myotubes was measured to 38% and 23% respectively. Islets from a cohort of human donors showed a respiratory leak of 38%, significantly lower than mouse islets.. The assay for islet respiration presented here provides a novel tool that can be used to study islet mitochondrial function in a relatively high-throughput manner. The data obtained in this study shows that rodent islets are less bioenergetically efficient than human islets as well as INS1 cells.

    Topics: Adult; Animals; Carbonyl Cyanide p-Trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone; Cell Line; Cell Respiration; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Female; High-Throughput Screening Assays; Humans; In Vitro Techniques; Insulin-Secreting Cells; Islets of Langerhans; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Middle Aged; Mitochondria; Oligomycins; Oxygen Consumption; Species Specificity; Uncoupling Agents; Young Adult

2012
Insulin resistance and the mitochondrial link. Lessons from cultured human myotubes.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 2007, Volume: 1772, Issue:7

    In order to better understand the impact of reduced mitochondrial function for the development of insulin resistance and cellular metabolism, human myotubes were established from lean, obese, and T2D subjects and exposed to mitochondrial inhibitors, either affecting the electron transport chain (Antimycin A), the ATP synthase (oligomycin) or respiratory uncoupling (2,4-dinitrophenol). Direct inhibition of the electron transport chain or the ATP synthase was followed by increased glucose uptake and lactate production, reduced glycogen synthesis, reduced lipid and glucose oxidation and unchanged lipid uptake. The metabolic phenotype during respiratory uncoupling resembled the above picture, except for an increase in glucose and palmitate oxidation. Antimycin A and oligomycin treatment induced insulin resistance at the level of glucose and palmitate uptake in all three study groups while, at the level of glycogen synthesis, insulin resistance was only seen in lean myotubes. Primary insulin resistance in diabetic myotubes was significantly worsened at the level of glucose and lipid uptake. The present study is the first convincing data linking functional mitochondrial impairment per se and insulin resistance. Taken together functional mitochondrial impairment could be part of the pathophysiology of insulin resistance in vivo.

    Topics: 2,4-Dinitrophenol; Antimycin A; Case-Control Studies; Cells, Cultured; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Glucose; Humans; Insulin Resistance; Lactic Acid; Middle Aged; Mitochondria, Muscle; Obesity; Oligomycins; Oxidation-Reduction

2007
Higher efficiency of the liver phosphorylative system in diabetic Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rats.
    FEBS letters, 1999, Sep-17, Volume: 458, Issue:2

    Liver mitochondrial bioenergetics of Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rats (a model of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus) reveals a Delta Psi upon energization with succinate significantly increased relatively to control animals. The repolarization rate following ADP phosphorylation is also significantly increased in GK mitochondria in parallel with increased ATPase activity. The increase in the repolarization rate and ATPase activity is presumably related to an improved efficiency of F(0)F(1)-ATPase, either from a better phosphorylative energy coupling or as a consequence of an enlarged number of catalytic units. Titrations with oligomycin indicate that diabetic GK liver mitochondria require excess oligomycin pulses to completely abolish phosphorylation, relative to control mitochondria. Therefore, accepting that the number of operational ATP synthase units is inversely proportional to the amount of added oligomycin, it is concluded that liver mitochondria of diabetic GK rats are provided with extra catalytic units relative to control mitochondria of normal rats. Other tissues (kidney, brain and skeletal muscle) were evaluated for the same bioenergetic parameters, confirming that this feature is exclusive to liver from diabetic GK rats.

    Topics: Adenosine Triphosphatases; Animals; Brain; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Energy Metabolism; Kidney; Male; Membrane Potentials; Mitochondria, Liver; Mitochondria, Muscle; Oligomycins; Phosphorylation; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Rats, Wistar; Substrate Specificity; Titrimetry

1999