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Antidiabetic effect of a prodrug of cysteine, L-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid, through CD38 dimerization and internalization

Authors :
Kwang-Hyun Park
Hyun-Jung Park
Myung-Kwan Han
Kum-Jae Park
Young-Mi Shin
Se-Jin Kim
Seon-Il Jang
Uh-Hyun Kim
Young-Ran Park
Nyeon-Hyoung An
Hyun-Kag Kim
Source :
The Journal of biological chemistry. 277(7)
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

CD38 is a bifunctional enzyme synthesizing (ADP-ribosyl cyclase) and degrading (cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) hydrolase) cADPR, a potent Ca(2+) mobilizer from intracellular pools. CD38 internalization has been proposed as a mechanism by which the ectoenzyme produced intracellular cADPR, and thiol compounds have been shown to induce the internalization of CD38. Here, we show that the disulfide bond between Cys-119 and Cys-201 in CD38 may be involved in CD38 dimerization and internalization. We tested the effect of a reducing agent, l-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid (OTC), a prodrug of cysteine, on CD38 internalization in pancreatic islets. OTC enhanced insulin release from isolated islets as well as CD38 internalization and cytoplasmic Ca(2+) level. Furthermore, islet cells treated with antisense CD38 oligonucleotide showed inhibition of OTC-induced insulin secretion. Intake of OTC in db/db mice ameliorated glucose tolerance, insulin secretion, and morphology of islets when compared with control mice. These data indicate that OTC improves glucose tolerance by enhancing insulin secretion via CD38/cADPR/Ca(2+) signaling machinery. Thus, OTC may represent a novel class of antidiabetic drug.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
277
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of biological chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17e6f2df74225e51e931301a5d77dd9f