Key Points: Inputs impinging on layer 5 pyramidal neurons perform essential operations as these cells represent one of the most important output carriers of the cerebral cortex. However, the contribution of astrocytes, a type of glial cell, to these operations is poorly documented. Here we found that optogenetic activation of astrocytes in the vicinity of layer 5 in the mouse primary visual cortex induces spiking in local pyramidal neurons through Nav1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: High glucocorticoid levels in rodents inhibit development of beta cells during fetal life and lead to insulin deficiency in adulthood. To test whether similar phenomena occur in humans, we compared beta-cell function in adults who were exposed to glucocorticoids during the first part of fetal life with that of nonexposed subjects.
Research Design And Methods: The study was conducted in 16 adult participants exposed to glucocorticoids during the first part of fetal life and in 16 nonexposed healthy participants with normal glucose tolerance who were matched for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI).
Background And Aims: c-Myc is highly expressed in pancreatic multipotent progenitor cells (MPC) and in pancreatic cancer. The transition from MPC to unipotent acinar progenitors is associated with c-Myc downregulation; a role for c-Myc in this process, and its possible relationship to a role in cancer, has not been established.
Design: Using coimmunoprecipitation assays, we demonstrate that c-Myc and Ptf1a interact.
Diabetes is a major complication of chronic Glucocorticoids (GCs) treatment. GCs induce insulin resistance and also inhibit insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells. Yet, a full understanding of this negative regulation remains to be deciphered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the 1980s, D. Barker and his team proposed the hypothesis of a fetal origin of adult diseases. The concept subsequently evolved into the developmental origins of health and diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPGC-1α is a transcriptional coactivator expressed in brown adipose tissue, liver, pancreas, kidney, skeletal and cardiac muscles, and the brain. This review presents data illustrating how PGC-1α regulates metabolic adaptations and participates in the aetiology of type 2 diabetes (T2D). Studies in mice have shown that increased PGC-1α expression may be beneficial or deleterious, depending on the tissue: in adipose tissue, it promotes thermogenesis and thus protects against energy overload, such as seen in diabetes and obesity; in muscle, PGC-1α induces a change of phenotype towards oxidative metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdult β-cell dysfunction, a hallmark of type 2 diabetes, can be programmed by adverse fetal environment. We have shown that fetal glucocorticoids (GCs) participate in this programming through inhibition of β-cell development. Here we have investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying this regulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Endocrinol Metab
June 2012
Maternal low-protein diets (LP) impair pancreatic β-cell development, resulting in later-life failure and susceptibility to type 2 diabetes (T2D). We hypothesized that intrauterine and/or postnatal developmental programming seen in this situation involve altered β-cell structure and relative time course of expression of genes critical to β-cell differentiation and growth. Pregnant Wistar rats were fed either control (C) 20% or restricted (R) 6% protein diets during pregnancy (1st letter) and/or lactation (2nd letter) in four groups: CC, RR, RC, and CR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConditional gene deletion in specific cell populations has helped the understanding of pancreas development. Using this approach, we have shown that deleting the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) gene in pancreatic precursor cells leads to a doubled beta-cell mass. Here, we provide genetic tools that permit a temporally and spatially controlled expression of target genes in pancreatic cells using the Tetracycline inducible system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims/hypothesis: Prenatal exposure to excess glucocorticoids associates with low birthweight in rodents, primates and humans and its involvement in programming glucose homeostasis is suspected. Our aim was to further dissect the role of glucocorticoids on beta cell development and function in mice.
Methods: Using the model of maternal general food restriction during the last week of pregnancy, we thoroughly studied in the CD1 mouse-mothers and fetal and adult offspring--the pancreatic, metabolic and molecular consequences of maternal undernutrition associated with excess glucocorticoids.
Glucocorticoids have been suggested to play a role in programming late adult disorders like diabetes during fetal life. Recent work in rodents showed their role in pancreas development by modulating the expression of transcription factors. The aim of this work was to investigate their possible implication in human pancreas development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims/hypothesis: Adverse events during intra-uterine life may programme organ growth and favour disease later in life. In animals, protein or energy restriction during gestation alters the development of the endocrine pancreas, even though the duration of malnutrition is different. Here, we evaluate the specific effects of both diets during different periods of gestation and the mechanisms underlying the decreased beta cell mass.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Endocrinol Metab
June 2007
Prenatal stress (PS) can cause early and long-term developmental effects resulting in part from altered maternal and/or fetal glucocorticoid exposure. The aim of the present study was to assess the impact of chronic restraint stress during late gestation on feto-placental unit physiology and function in embryonic (E) day 21 male rat fetuses. Chronic stress decreased body weight gain and food intake of the dams and increased their adrenal weight.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims/hypothesis: Beta cell development is sensitive to glucocorticoid levels. Although direct effects of glucocorticoids on pancreatic precursors have been shown to control beta cell mass expansion, indirect effects of these hormones on pancreatic development remain unexplored. This issue was addressed in mice lacking the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) in the whole organism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLow birth weight is strongly predictive of hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, obesity, insulin resistance and diabetes. The mechanisms by which fetal undernutrition and, hence, low birth weight increase the risk of developing these diseases are unclear. To investigate the hypothesis of a primary defect in beta-cell development, we designed a rat model of undernutrition, involving an overall reduction in maternal food intake.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo determine whether glucocorticoids are involved in pancreas development, glucocorticoid treatment of rat pancreatic buds in vitro was combined with the analysis of transgenic mice lacking the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) in specific pancreatic cells. In vitro treatment of embryonic pancreata with dexamethasone, a glucocorticoid agonist, induced a decrease of insulin-expressing cell numbers and a doubling of acinar cell area, indicating that glucocorticoids favored acinar differentiation; in line with this, expression of Pdx-1, Pax-6, and Nkx6.1 was downregulated, whereas the mRNA levels of Ptf1-p48 and Hes-1 were increased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the cellular mechanisms responsible for the inability of 8-month-old previously malnourished (PM) females to adapt their beta-cell mass during pregnancy. The evolution during pregnancy of beta-cell fraction, size and proliferation was studied. At day 21 of pregnancy beta-cell fraction increased less in PM than in control females, compared with their non-pregnant values.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims/hypothesis: alpha-Endosulphine, a protein that belongs to the cAMP-regulated-phosphoprotein family, has been reported to modulate insulin secretion in vitro through interaction with the pancreatic beta-cell ATP-sensitive potassium (K(ATP)) channel. In this study, we analysed the tissue distribution of alpha-endosulphine and determined its pancreatic cellular localization.
Methods: Quantitative tissue distribution of alpha-endosulphine was studied by RIA on tissue extracts and cellular/subcellular localization was done using immunocytochemistry, morphometry and western blot analysis.
Fetal intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) is a frequently occurring and serious complication of pregnancy. Infants exposed to IUGR are at risk for numerous perinatal morbidities, including hypoglycemia in the neonatal period, as well as increased risk of later physical and/or mental impairments, cardiovascular disease and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Fetal growth restriction most often results from uteroplacental dysfunction during the later stage of pregnancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims/hypothesis: We have shown that perinatal malnutrition decreases beta-cell mass at birth and impairs the adaptation of the endocrine pancreas to a subsequent pregnancy. The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of this maternal inadaptation on the development of endocrine pancreas in foetuses.
Methods: Female rats malnourished during their perinatal life and showing intra-uterine growth retardation at birth were mated at 8 months of age.
PRL and placental lactogen (PL) stimulate beta-cell proliferation and insulin gene transcription in isolated islets and rat insulinoma cells, but the roles of the lactogenic hormones in islet development and insulin production in vivo remain unclear. To clarify the roles of the lactogens in pancreatic development and function, we measured islet density (number of islets/cm(2)) and mean islet size, beta-cell mass, pancreatic insulin mRNA levels, islet insulin content, and the insulin secretory response to glucose in an experimental model of lactogen resistance: the PRL receptor (PRLR)-deficient mouse. We then measured plasma glucose concentrations after ip injections of glucose or insulin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn humans, an altered control of cortisol secretion was reported in adult men born with a low birth weight making the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis a possible primary target of early life programming. In rats, we have recently shown that maternal food restriction during late pregnancy induces both an intrauterine growth retardation and an overexposure of fetuses to maternal corticosterone, which disturb the development of the HPA axis in offspring. The first aim of this work was to investigate, in adult male rats, whether perinatal malnutrition has long-lasting effects on the HPA axis activity during both basal and stressful conditions.
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