Relationship Between Serum Amyloid A Level and Tanis/SelS mRNA Expression in Skeletal Muscle and Adipose Tissue From Healthy and Type 2 Diabetic Subjects
- 1Department of Surgical Science, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
- 2Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
- 3Biovitrum, Stockholm, Sweden
- 4Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland
- 5Biomedicum, Helsinki, Finland
- Address correspondence and reprint requests to Anna Krook, Integrative Physiology, Department of PhysiologyPharmacology, Karolinska Institutet, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden. E-mail: anna.krook{at}fyfa.ki.se
Abstract
Tanis is a recently described protein reported to be a putative receptor for serum amyloid A and found to be dysregulated with diabetes in the Israeli sand rat Psamommys obesus. Tanis has also been identified as a selenoprotein, one of the first two identified membrane selenoproteins. We determined mRNA expression of the human homologue of Tanis, SelS/AD-015, in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue biopsies obtained from 10 type 2 diabetic patients and 11 age- and weight-matched healthy subjects. Expression of Tanis/SelS mRNA in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue biopsies was similar between diabetic and control subjects. A subset of subjects underwent a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp, and adipose tissue expression of Tanis/SelS was determined after in vivo insulin stimulation. Adipose tissue Tanis/SelS mRNA expression was unchanged after insulin infusion in control subjects, whereas Tanis/SelS mRNA increased in seven of eight subjects following insulin stimulation in diabetic subjects. Skeletal muscle and adipose tissue Tanis/SelS mRNA expression were positively correlated with plasma serum amyloid A. In conclusion, there is a strong trend toward upregulation of Tanis/SelS following insulin infusion in adipose tissue from type 2 diabetic subjects. Moreover, the positive relationship between Tanis mRNA and the acute-phase protein serum amyloid A suggests an interaction between innate immune system responses and Tanis expression in muscle and adipose tissue.
Footnotes
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H.K.R.K. and H.T. contributed equally to this study.
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- Accepted March 17, 2004.
- Received December 23, 2003.
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