Evidence for an interaction between proinsulin C-peptide and GPR146.

J Endocrinol

Department of Pharmacological and Physiological Science, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 S Grand Boulevard, Saint Louis, Missouri 63104, USA.

Published: September 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Microvascular diseases like retinopathies, neuropathies, and nephropathies are serious complications of diabetes, but their underlying causes and effective treatments are not well understood.
  • Research suggests that proinsulin C-peptide may help protect against these complications, making it a potential therapeutic target, though identifying its receptor is crucial for developing treatments.
  • The study identifies GPR146 as a likely receptor for C-peptide signaling, demonstrating its importance through experiments showing that blocking GPR146 disrupts C-peptide's effects on certain cells.

Article Abstract

Microvascular diseases, such as retinopathies, neuropathies, and nephropathies, are a devastating consequence of type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The etiology of diabetes-associated microvascular dysfunction is poorly understood, and, likewise, treatment modalities for these disorders are limited. Interestingly, proinsulin C-peptide has been shown to play a protective role against diabetes-associated complications in experimental animals and in diabetic humans and is thus an attractive therapeutic target. However, an important step in the development of C-peptide-based therapeutics is identification of the C-peptide receptor, which is likely a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Using a unique Deductive Ligand-Receptor Matching Strategy, we sought to determine whether one of the known orphan GPCRs is essential for C-peptide signaling. Knockdown of GPR146, but not GPR107 or GPR160, blocked C-peptide-induced cFos expression in KATOIII cells. Furthermore, stimulation with C-peptide caused internalization of GPR146, and examples of punctate colocalization were observed between C-peptide and GPR146 on KATOIII cell membranes. These data indicate that GPR146 is likely a part of the C-peptide signaling complex and provide a platform for the elucidation of the C-peptide signalosome.

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