The purine metabolite inosine monophosphate accelerates myelopoiesis and acute pancreatitis progression.
Xiao-Min LuoSin Man LamYuan DongXiao-Juan MaCen YanYue-Jie ZhangYu CaoLi SuGuotao LuJin-Kui YangGuang-Hou ShuiYing-Mei FengPublished in: Communications biology (2022)
Hyperglycemia-induced myelopoiesis and atherosclerotic progression occur in mice with type I diabetes. However, less is known about the effects of metabolites on myelopoesis in type 2 diabetes. Here, we use fluorescence-activated cell sorting to analyze the proliferation of granulocyte/monocyte progenitors (GMP) in db/db mice. Using targeted metabolomics, we identify an increase in inosine monophosphate (IMP) in GMP cells of 24-week-old mice. We show that IMP treatment stimulates cKit expression, ribosomal S6 activation, GMP proliferation, and Gr-1 + granulocyte production in vitro. IMP activates pAkt in non-GMP cells. In vivo, using an established murine acute pancreatitis (AP) model, administration of IMP-treated bone marrow cells enhances the severity of AP. This effect is abolished in the presence of a pAkt inhibitor. Targeted metabolomics show that plasma levels of guanosine monophosphate are significantly higher in diabetic patients with AP. These findings provid a potential therapeutic target for the control of vascular complications in diabetes.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- bone marrow
- signaling pathway
- cardiovascular disease
- transcription factor
- glycemic control
- biofilm formation
- oxidative stress
- peripheral blood
- high fat diet induced
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- clinical trial
- cancer therapy
- randomized controlled trial
- insulin resistance
- cell death
- diabetic rats
- stem cells
- escherichia coli
- metabolic syndrome
- immune response
- skeletal muscle
- high glucose
- pi k akt
- smoking cessation
- long non coding rna
- stress induced
- placebo controlled
- recombinant human
- replacement therapy