Publications by Year: 2008

2008

Rajala, Ammaji, Masaki Tanito, Yun Le, Ronald Kahn, and Raju Rajala. 2008. “Loss of neuroprotective survival signal in mice lacking insulin receptor gene in rod photoreceptor cells”. J Biol Chem 283 (28): 19781-92. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M802374200.
Insulin receptor (IR) signaling provides a trophic signal for transformed retinal neurons in culture, but the role of IR activity in vivo is unknown. We previously reported that light causes increased tyrosine phosphorylation of the IR in vivo, which leads to the downstream activation of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase and Akt pathway in rod photoreceptor cells. The functional role of IR in rod photoreceptor cells is not known. We observed that light stress induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the IR in rod photoreceptor cells, and we hypothesized that IR activation is neuroprotective. To determine whether IR has a neuroprotective role on rod photoreceptor cells, we used the Cre/lox system to specifically inactivate the IR gene in rod photoreceptors. Rod-specific IR knock-out mice have reduced the phosphoinositide 3-kinase and Akt survival signal in rod photoreceptors. The resultant mice exhibited no detectable phenotype when they were raised in dim cyclic light. However, reduced IR expression in rod photoreceptors significantly decreased retinal function and caused the loss of photoreceptors in mice exposed to bright light stress. These results indicate that reduced expression of IR in rod photoreceptor cells increases their susceptibility to light-induced photoreceptor degeneration. These data suggest that the IR pathway is important for photoreceptor survival and that activation of the IR may be an essential element of photoreceptor neuroprotection.
Tran, Thien, Yuji Yamamoto, Stephane Gesta, and Ronald Kahn. (2008) 2008. “Beneficial effects of subcutaneous fat transplantation on metabolism”. Cell Metab 7 (5): 410-20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2008.04.004.
Subcutaneous (SC) and visceral (VIS) obesity are associated with different risks of diabetes and the metabolic syndrome. To elucidate whether these differences are due to anatomic location or intrinsic differences in adipose depots, we characterized mice after transplantation of SC or VIS fat from donor mice into either SC or VIS regions of recipient mice. The group with SC fat transplanted into the VIS cavity exhibited decreased body weight, total fat mass, and glucose and insulin levels. These mice also exhibited improved insulin sensitivity during hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps with increased whole-body glucose uptake, glucose uptake into endogenous fat, and insulin suppression of hepatic glucose production. These effects were observed to a lesser extent with SC fat transplanted to the SC area, whereas VIS fat transplanted to the VIS area was without effect. These data suggest that SC fat is intrinsically different from VIS fat and produces substances that can act systemically to improve glucose metabolism.