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Micro-RNAs, Fatty Acids and Insulin Secretion

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Presentation on theme: "Micro-RNAs, Fatty Acids and Insulin Secretion"— Presentation transcript:

1 Micro-RNAs, Fatty Acids and Insulin Secretion
Prelim Mock Talk by -Mufaddal S Soni Attie Lab

2 Outline Introduction Preliminary Data Specific Aims Conclusion
Diabetes model Micro-RNAs Preliminary Data Specific Aims Conclusion The Economist, 12/13/03

3 Obesity-diabetes dichotomy
Lean Lepob/ob B6 BTBR Obese Diabetic Age (weeks) 3

4 Mature miRNA: Mechanism of action
Shivdasani, R.A. Blood 2006

5 Micro-RNA 132 and 212 up-regulated due to obesity in islets
~13 fold in B6 (Diabetes resistant) and ~3 fold in BTBR mice (Diabetes susceptible)

6 Micro-RNA 132 enhances insulin secretion in β-cells
Micro-RNA 132 and 212 up-regulated due to obesity in islets Micro-RNA 132 enhances insulin secretion in β-cells Note: miRNA 212 is also shown to enhance insulin secretion.

7 slc25a20 is the most down-regulated gene
slc25A20 = CACT Carnitine Acyl-Carnitine Translocase (CACT)

8 CACT Insulin Secretion in β-cells
slc25a20 is the most down-regulated gene (CACT)

9 CACT mediates translocation of FA-Carn into the mitochondria for β-oxidation
miRNA 132 ATP

10 CACT mediates translocation of FA-Carn into the mitochondria for β-oxidation
ATP

11 Preliminary Data & Hypothesis..

12 Conditions that I have shown to enhance insulin secretion
ATP

13 Aim 1: Determine the molecular fate of LC-Carn when stimulating insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Decrease CPT-1 activity and determine if LC-Carn stimulates insulin secretion. Experiment 2: Determine if siRNA-mediated knockdown of CACT leads to reduced fatty acid β-oxidation. Experiment 3: Determine the molecular fate of exogenous FA-Carn under conditions when CACT activity is diminished. Experiment 4: Determine if a non-metabolized analog of fatty acyl-carnitine is capable of stimulating insulin secretion. ATP

14 Aim 1: Determine the molecular fate of LC-Carn when stimulating insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Decrease CPT-1 activity and determine if LC-Carn stimulates insulin secretion. Experiment 2: Determine if siRNA-mediated knockdown of CACT leads to reduced fatty acid β-oxidation. Experiment 3: Determine the molecular fate of exogenous FA-Carn under conditions when CACT activity is diminished. Experiment 4: Determine if a non-metabolized analog of fatty acyl-carnitine is capable of stimulating insulin secretion. ATP

15 Aim 1: Determine the molecular fate of LC-Carn when stimulating insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Decrease CPT-1 activity and determine if LC-Carn stimulates insulin secretion. Experiment 2: Determine if siRNA-mediated knockdown of CACT leads to reduced fatty acid β-oxidation. Experiment 3: Determine the molecular fate of exogenous FA-Carn under conditions when CACT activity is diminished. Experiment 4: Determine if a non-metabolized analog of fatty acyl-carnitine is capable of stimulating insulin secretion. ATP

16 Aim 1: Determine the molecular fate of LC-Carn when stimulating insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Decrease CPT-1 activity and determine if LC-Carn stimulates insulin secretion. Experiment 2: Determine if siRNA-mediated knockdown of CACT leads to reduced fatty acid β-oxidation. Experiment 3: Determine the molecular fate of exogenous FA-Carn under conditions when CACT activity is diminished. Experiment 4: Determine if a non-metabolized analog of fatty acyl-carnitine is capable of stimulating insulin secretion. ATP

17 Aim 1: Determine the molecular fate of LC-Carn when stimulating insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Decrease CPT-1 activity and determine if LC-Carn stimulates insulin secretion. Experiment 2: Determine if siRNA-mediated knockdown of CACT leads to reduced fatty acid β-oxidation. Experiment 3: Determine the molecular fate of exogenous FA-Carn under conditions when CACT activity is diminished. Experiment 4: Determine if a non-metabolized analog of fatty acyl-carnitine is capable of stimulating insulin secretion. ATP

18 Aim 1: Determine the molecular fate of LC-Carn when stimulating insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Decrease CPT-1 activity and determine if LC-Carn stimulates insulin secretion. Experiment 2: Determine if siRNA-mediated knockdown of CACT leads to reduced fatty acid β-oxidation. Experiment 3: Determine the molecular fate of exogenous FA-Carn under conditions when CACT activity is diminished. Experiment 4: Determine if a non-metabolized analog of fatty acyl-carnitine is capable of stimulating insulin secretion. ATP

19 Aim 1: Determine the molecular fate of LC-Carn when stimulating insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Decrease CPT-1 activity and determine if LC-Carn stimulates insulin secretion. Experiment 2: Determine if siRNA-mediated knockdown of CACT leads to reduced fatty acid β-oxidation. Experiment 3: Determine the molecular fate of exogenous FA-Carn under conditions when CACT activity is diminished. Experiment 4: Determine if a non-metabolized analog of fatty acyl-carnitine is capable of stimulating insulin secretion. ATP

20 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion. FFA

21 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion. FFA

22 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion. FFA

23 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion. FFA

24 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion.

25 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion.

26 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion.

27 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion.

28 Aim 2: Identify the underlying signaling pathway using which LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion.
Experiment 1: Determine if LC-Carns enhance insulin secretion through PKC activation. Experiment 2: Study the role of cAMP and PKA in LC-Carn effects on insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Determine if the insulin signaling pathway is involved in LC-Carn mediated insulin secretion.

29 Aim 3: Elucidate the role of Carnitine Acetyl Transferase (CrAT) in regulating insulin secretion.
Glucose Tolerance Test ATP β-cell specific CrAT KO mouse Glucose stimulated insulin secretion Prof. Randall Mynatt, LSU.

30 Aim 3: Elucidate the role of Carnitine Acetyl Transferase (CrAT) in regulating insulin secretion.
Glucose Tolerance Test Factors leading to defective glucose clearance: Reduced insulin secretion. Insulin resistance. Experiment 1: Measure insulin secretion and glucose clearance of β-cell CrAT KO mice. Repeat the “Glucose Tolerance Test” and also track insulin levels using C-peptide measurements. 2. Perform an “Insulin Tolerance Test” to measure insulin sensitivity of the CrAT KO mice.

31 Amplification Pathway
Aim 3: Elucidate the role of Carnitine Acetyl Transferase (CrAT) in regulating insulin secretion. Experiment 2: Determine the phase of insulin secretion altered in CrAT mice. Perifusion study Amplification Pathway (2nd Phase) Triggering Pathway (1st Phase)

32 Experiment 3: Metabolic profiling of the βCrAT mouse islets.
Aim 3: Elucidate the role of Carnitine Acetyl Transferase (CrAT) in regulating insulin secretion. Experiment 3: Metabolic profiling of the βCrAT mouse islets. Carnitine metabolites of the βCrAT mouse islets will be profiled. A correlation between acyl carnitine levels and insulin secretion will be obtained.

33 Conclusion Aim 1: Determine the active species
Aim 2: Determine the signaling pathway involved in LC Carnintine mediated insulin secretion. Aim 3: Identify the function of CrAT in insulin secretion.

34 Thank You!!! Questions??

35 FFA enhances insulin secretion LC-Carn enhances insulin secretion
FFA is the active species Both use independent mechanisms LC-Carn is the active species Koves, R. T. et.al. Cell Metabolism, 2007


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