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Dive into the research topics where Franz M. Matschinsky is active.

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Featured researches published by Franz M. Matschinsky.


Annals of Surgery | 2003

Insulin independence following isolated islet transplantation and single islet infusions

James F. Markmann; Shaoping Deng; Xiaolun Huang; Niraj M. Desai; Ergun Velidedeoglu; Chengyang Lui; Adam Frank; Eileen Markmann; Maral Palanjian; Kenneth L. Brayman; Bryan A. Wolf; Ewan Bell; Marko Vitamaniuk; Nicolai M. Doliba; Franz M. Matschinsky; Clyde F. Barker; Ali Naji

ObjectiveTo restore islet function in patients whose labile diabetes subjected them to frequent dangerous episodes of hypoglycemic unawareness, and to determine whether multiple transplants are always required to achieve insulin independence. Summary Background DataThe recent report by the Edmonton group documenting restoration of insulin independence by islet transplantation in seven consecutive patients with type 1 diabetes differed from previous worldwide experience of only sporadic success. In the Edmonton patients, the transplanted islet mass critical for success was approximately more than 9,000 IEq/kg of recipient body weight and required two or three separate transplants of islets isolated from two to four cadaveric donors. Whether the success of the Edmonton group can be recapitulated by others, and whether repeated transplants using multiple donors will be a universal requirement for success have not been reported. MethodsThe authors report their treatment with islet transplantation of nine patients whose labile type 1 diabetes was characterized by frequent episodes of dangerous hypoglycemia. ResultsIn each of the seven patients who have completed the treatment protocol (i.e., one or if necessary a second islet transplant), insulin independence has been achieved. In five of the seven patients only a single infusion of islets was required. To date, only one recipient has subsequently lost graft function, after an initially successful transplant. This patient suffered recurrent hyperglycemia 9 months after the transplant. ConclusionsThis report confirms the efficacy of the Edmonton immunosuppressive regimen and indicates that insulin independence can often be achieved by a single transplant of sufficient islet mass.


Diabetologia | 1999

Mutants of glucokinase cause hypoglycaemia- and hyperglycaemia syndromes and their analysis illuminates fundamental quantitative concepts of glucose homeostasis

E. Davis; Antonio L. Cuesta-Muñoz; M. Raoul; Carol Buettger; Ian R. Sweet; M. Moates; Mark A. Magnuson; Franz M. Matschinsky

Aims/hypothesis. Mutations of the glucokinase gene cause hyperglycaemia or hypoglycaemia. A quantitative understanding of these defects of glucose homeostasis linked to the glucokinase gene was lacking. Therefore a database of kinetic variables of wild-type and 20 missense mutants of glucokinase was developed and used in mathematical modelling to predict the thresholds for glucose-stimulated insulin release. Methods. Recombinant human glucokinase was generated in E. coli. The kcat, glucose S0.5, ATP Km, and Hill number of glucokinase were determined. Inhibition by Stearoyl CoA and glucokinase regulatory protein and thermal stability were assayed for all mutants kinetically similar to wild-type glucokinase. A mathematical model predicting the threshold for glucose-stimulated insulin release was constructed. This model is based on the two substrate kinetics of glucokinase and the kinetic variables of the database. It is assumed that both glucokinase gene alleles are equally expressed in beta-cells and that induction of glucokinase occurs as a function of basal blood glucose. Results. Large changes, varying greatly between mutants were found in nearly all variables. Glucokinase flux at threshold for glucose-stimulated insulin release was about 25 % of total phosphorylating potential in the normal beta-cell and this was used to predict thresholds for the mutant heterozygotes. Clinical data for maturity onset diabetes of the young type linked to the glucokinase gene and familial hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia linked to the glucokinase gene and the glucokinase kinetic data of this study were used to test the model. The model predicts fasting blood glucose between 3 and 7 mmol/l in these cases. Conclusion/interpretation. A kinetics database of wild-type and 20 mutants of glucokinase was developed. Many kinetic differences were found for the mutants. The mathematical model to calculate the threshold for glucose-stimulated insulin release predicts fasting blood glucose between 3 and 7 mmol/l in subjects with glucokinase gene mutations. [Diabetologia 42: 1175–1186]


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

Foxa2 regulates multiple pathways of insulin secretion

Kristen A. Lantz; Marko Z. Vatamaniuk; John Brestelli; Joshua R. Friedman; Franz M. Matschinsky; Klaus H. Kaestner

The regulation of insulin secretion by pancreatic beta cells is perturbed in several diseases, including adult-onset (type 2) diabetes and persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy (PHHI). The first mouse model for PHHI has a conditional deletion of the gene encoding the winged-helix transcription factor Foxa2 (Forkhead box a2, formerly Hepatocyte nuclear factor 3beta) in pancreatic beta cells. Using isolated islets, we found that Foxa2 deficiency resulted in excessive insulin release in response to amino acids and complete loss of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Most PHHI cases are associated with mutations in SUR1 (Sulfonylurea receptor 1) or KIR6.2 (Inward rectifier K(+) channel member 6.2), which encode the subunits of the ATP-sensitive K(+) channel, and RNA in situ hybridization of mutant mouse islets revealed that expression of both genes is Foxa2 dependent. We utilized expression profiling to identify additional targets of Foxa2. Strikingly, one of these genes, Hadhsc, encodes short-chain L-3-hydroxyacyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase, deficiency of which has been shown to cause PHHI in humans. Hadhsc is a direct target of Foxa2, as demonstrated by cotransfection as well as in vivo chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments using isolated islets. Thus, we have established Foxa2 as an essential activator of genes that function in multiple pathways governing insulin secretion.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Regulation of Leucine-stimulated Insulin Secretion and Glutamine Metabolism in Isolated Rat Islets

Changhong Li; Habiba Najafi; Yevgeny Daikhin; Ilana Nissim; Heather W. Collins; Marc Yudkoff; Franz M. Matschinsky; Charles A. Stanley

Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) is regulated by both positive (leucine and ADP) and negative (GTP and ATP) allosteric factors. We hypothesized that the phosphate potential of β-cells regulates the sensitivity of leucine stimulation. These predictions were tested by measuring leucine-stimulated insulin secretion in perifused rat islets following glucose depletion and by tracing the nitrogen flux of [2-15N]glutamine using stable isotope techniques. The sensitivity of leucine stimulation was enhanced by long time (120-min) energy depletion and inhibited by glucose pretreatment. After limited 50-min glucose depletion, leucine, not α-ketoisocaproate, failed to stimulate insulin release. β-Cells sensitivity to leucine is therefore proposed to be a function of GDH activation. Leucine increased the flux through GDH 3-fold compared with controls while causing insulin release. High glucose inhibited flux through both glutaminase and GDH, and leucine was unable to override this inhibition. These results clearly show that leucine induced the secretion of insulin by augmenting glutaminolysis through activating glutaminase and GDH. Glucose regulates β-cell sensitivity to leucine by elevating the ratio of ATP and GTP to ADP and Pi and thereby decreasing the flux through GDH and glutaminase. These mechanisms provide an explanation for hypoglycemia caused by mutations of GDH in children.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Green Tea Polyphenols Modulate Insulin Secretion by Inhibiting Glutamate Dehydrogenase

Changhong Li; Aron Allen; Jae Kwagh; Nicolai M. Doliba; Wei Qin; Habiba Najafi; Heather W. Collins; Franz M. Matschinsky; Charles A. Stanley; Thomas J. Smith

Insulin secretion by pancreatic β-cells is stimulated by glucose, amino acids, and other metabolic fuels. Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) has been shown to play a regulatory role in this process. The importance of GDH was underscored by features of hyperinsulinemia/hyperammonemia syndrome, where a dominant mutation causes the loss of inhibition by GTP and ATP. Here we report the effects of green tea polyphenols on GDH and insulin secretion. Of the four compounds tested, epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) and epicatechin gallate were found to inhibit GDH with nanomolar ED50 values and were therefore found to be as potent as the physiologically important inhibitor GTP. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that EGCG inhibits BCH-stimulated insulin secretion, a process that is mediated by GDH, under conditions where GDH is no longer inhibited by high energy metabolites. EGCG does not affect glucose-stimulated insulin secretion under high energy conditions where GDH is probably fully inhibited. We have further shown that these compounds act in an allosteric manner independent of their antioxidant activity and that the β-cell stimulatory effects are directly correlated with glutamine oxidation. These results demonstrate that EGCG, much like the activator of GDH (BCH), can facilitate dissecting the complex regulation of insulin secretion by pharmacologically modulating the effects of GDH.


Diabetologia | 2001

High prevalence of glucokinase mutations in Italian children with MODY. Influence on glucose tolerance, first-phase insulin response, insulin sensitivity and BMI

Ornella Massa; Franco Meschi; Antonio L. Cuesta-Muñoz; A. Caumo; Franco Cerutti; Sonia Toni; Valentino Cherubini; L. Guazzarotti; Nicoletta Sulli; Franz M. Matschinsky; R. Lorini; Dario Iafusco; Fabrizio Barbetti

Aims/hypothesis. The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of glucokinase gene mutations in Italian children with MODY and to investigate genotype/phenotype correlations of the mutants. Methods. Screening for sequence variants in the glucokinase gene was performed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and direct sequencing in 132 children with maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and in 9 children with chronic fasting hyperglycaemia but without laboratory evidence for Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus and with normoglycaemic parents (“non-classical” MODY). Results. Altogether 54 mutations were identified in the MODY group (54/132 or 41 %) and 3 among the “non-classical” MODY individuals (3/9 or 33 %). Paternity testing indicated that the latter mutations have arisen de novo. Mean fasting plasma glucose concentrations of the children with the mutant glucokinase was in the expected impaired fasting glucose range. In contrast, results of the oral glucose tolerance test showed a wide range from normal glucose tolerance (Group 1: 2-h OGTT = 6.7 ± 1.1 mmol/l; 11 patients) to diabetes (Group 2: 2-h OGTT = 11.5 ± 0.5 mmol/l; 9 patients), with the remaining in the impaired glucose tolerance range. Disruptive mutations (i. e. nonsense, frameshifts, splice-site) were equally represented in Groups 1 and 2 and were not clearly associated with an impaired first-phase insulin response. Surprisingly, 5 out of 11 children (or 45 %) in Group 1 were found to be overweight but no children in Group 2 were overweight. Sensitivity index (SI), calculated by a recently described method, was found to be significantly lower in Group 2 than in Group 1 (SI Group 2 = 0.0013 ± 0.0009 ml Kg–1 min–1/μU/ml; SI Group 1 = 0.0068 ± 0.0048, p < 0.0035). Conclusion/interpretation. Mutations in glucokinase are the first cause of MODY among Italian children selected through a low threshold limit of fasting plasma glucose (i. e. > 5.5 mmol). The lack of correlation between the molecular severity of glucokinase mutations, insulin secretion at intravenous glucose tolerance test and differences in glucose tolerance suggests that factors outside the beta cell are also involved in determining post-load glucose concentrations in these subjects. Our results seem to indicate that the differences observed in the 2-h responses at the OGTT among children with MODY 2 could be related to individual differences in insulin sensitivity. [Diabetologia (2001) 44: 898–905]


Transplantation | 2003

The use of non-heart-beating donors for isolated pancreatic islet transplantation

James F. Markmann; Shaoping Deng; Niraj M. Desai; Xiaolun Huang; Ergun Velidedeoglu; Adam Frank; Chengyang Liu; Kenneth L. Brayman; Moh Moh Lian; Bryan A. Wolf; Ewan Bell; Marko Vitamaniuk; Nicolai M. Doliba; Franz M. Matschinsky; Eileen Markmann; Clyde F. Barker; Ali Naji

Recent improvements in isolated islet transplantation indicate that this therapy may ultimately prove applicable to patients with type I diabetes. An obstacle preventing widespread application of islet transplantation is an insufficient supply of cadaveric pancreata. Non-heart-beating donors (NHBDs) are generally not deemed suitable for whole-organ pancreas donation and could provide a significant source of pancreata for islet transplantation. Isolated pancreatic islets prepared from 10 NHBDs were compared with those procured from 10 brain-dead donors (BDDs). The success of the isolation for the two groups was analyzed for preparation purity, quality, and recovered islet mass. The function of NHBD and BDD islets was evaluated using in vitro and in vivo assays. On the basis of the results of this analysis, an NHBD isolated islet allograft was performed in a type I diabetic. The recovery of islets from NHBDs was comparable to that of control BDDs. In vitro assessment of NHBD islet function revealed function-equivalent BDD islets, and NHBD islets transplanted to non-obese diabetic-severe combined immunodeficient (NOD-SCID) mice efficiently reversed diabetes. Transplantation of 446,320 islet equivalents (IEq) (8,500 IEq/kg of recipient body weight) from a single NHBD successfully reversed the diabetes of a type I diabetic recipient. Normally functioning pancreatic islets can be isolated successfully from NHBDs. A single donor transplant from an NHBD resulted in a state of stable insulin independence in a type I diabetic recipient. These results indicate that NHBDs may provide an as yet untapped source of pancreatic tissue for preparation of isolated islets for clinical transplantation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Insights into the structure and regulation of glucokinase from a novel mutation (V62M), which causes maturity-onset diabetes of the young.

Anna L. Gloyn; Stella Odili; Dorothy Zelent; Carol Buettger; Harriet A. J. Castleden; Anna M. Steele; Amanda Stride; Chyio Shiota; Mark A. Magnuson; Renata Lorini; Giuseppe d'Annunzio; Charles A. Stanley; Jae Kwagh; Emile Van Schaftingen; Maria Veiga-da-Cunha; Fabrizio Barbetti; Pete W. Dunten; Yi Han; Joseph Grimsby; Rebecca Taub; Sian Ellard; Andrew T. Hattersley; Franz M. Matschinsky

Glucokinase (GCK) serves as the pancreatic glucose sensor. Heterozygous inactivating GCK mutations cause hyperglycemia, whereas activating mutations cause hypoglycemia. We studied the GCK V62M mutation identified in two families and co-segregating with hyperglycemia to understand how this mutation resulted in reduced function. Structural modeling locates the mutation close to five naturally occurring activating mutations in the allosteric activator site of the enzyme. Recombinant glutathionyl S-transferase-V62M GCK is paradoxically activated rather than inactivated due to a decreased S0.5 for glucose compared with wild type (4.88 versus 7.55 mm). The recently described pharmacological activator (RO0281675) interacts with GCK at this site. V62M GCK does not respond to RO0281675, nor does it respond to the hepatic glucokinase regulatory protein (GKRP). The enzyme is also thermally unstable, but this lability is apparently less pronounced than in the proven instability mutant E300K. Functional and structural analysis of seven amino acid substitutions at residue Val62 has identified a non-linear relationship between activation by the pharmacological activator and the van der Waals interactions energies. Smaller energies allow a hydrophobic interaction between the activator and glucokinase, whereas larger energies prohibit the ligand from fitting into the binding pocket. We conclude that V62M may cause hyperglycemia by a complex defect of GCK regulation involving instability in combination with loss of control by a putative endogenous activator and/or GKRP. This study illustrates that mutations that cause hyperglycemia are not necessarily kinetically inactivating but may exert their effects by other complex mechanisms. Elucidating such mechanisms leads to a deeper understanding of the GCK glucose sensor and the biochemistry of β-cells and hepatocytes.


Human Gene Therapy | 2004

Transduction of Human Islets with Pseudotyped Lentiviral Vectors

Gary P. Kobinger; Shaoping Deng; Jean-Pierre Louboutin; Marko Z. Vatamaniuk; Franz M. Matschinsky; James F. Markmann; Steven E. Raper; James M. Wilson

Type I diabetes is caused by an autoimmune-mediated elimination of insulin-secreting pancreatic islets. Genetic modification of islets offers a powerful molecular tool for improving our understanding of islet biology. Moreover, efficient genetic engineering of islets could allow for evaluation of new strategies aimed at preventing islet destruction. The present study evaluated the ability of a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-based lentiviral vector pseudotyped with various viral envelopes to target human islets ex vivo, with the goal of improving efficiency while minimizing toxicity. Transfer of the enhanced green fluorescent protein reporter gene in human islets was first evaluated with an HIV-based vector pseudotyped with the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), murine leukemia virus, Ebola, rabies, Mokola, or lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) envelope glycoprotein to optimize transduction efficiency. Results indicated that LCMV-pseudotyped vector transduced insulin-secreting beta cells with the highest efficiency. Moreover, toxicity associated with transduction of islets was found to be lower with LCMV-pseudotyped vector than with VSV-G-pseudotyped vector, the second most efficient vector for islet transduction. Overall, our study describes an improved methodology for achieving safe and efficient gene transfer into cells of human islets.


Life Sciences | 2001

Effect of retinoic acid on glucokinase activity and gene expression in neonatal and adult cultured hepatocytes.

Gabriela Cabrera-Valladares; Franz M. Matschinsky; Juehu Wang; Cristina Fernandez-Mejia

It has been shown that all-trans retinoic acid induces prematurely hepatic glucokinase mRNA in ten days-old neonatal rat hepatocytes, however, this effect could be related to the capacity of the retinoid to promote a more differentiated state of the hepatocyte. In this report we demonstrate that physiological concentrations of all-trans retinoic acid stimulate glucokinase activity in both mature fully differentiated hepatocytes and at the onset of the induction of the enzyme in 15 to 17 days-old neonatal hepatocytes. The effects produced by the retinoid were similar both in magnitude and in time, to those elicited by insulin, a well-known stimulator of hepatic glucokinase expression. No additive effect was observed when insulin and retinoic acid were tested together. Using the branched DNA assay, a sensitive signal amplification technique, we detected relative increases in glucokinase mRNA levels of about 70% at 3 and 24 h after the treatment with 10(-6) M all-trans retinoic acid, in both neonatal and adult hepatocytes. These data show that retinoic acid exerts a stimulatory effect on hepatic glucokinase independent of the hepatocyte stage of maturity and suggest a physiological role of retinoic acid on glucose metabolism. The action of retinoic acid on hepatic glucokinase might explain previous observations on the relationship between vitamin A status and liver glycogen synthesis. These findings may serve as basis for further investigations on the biological functions of retinoic acid derivatives on hepatic glucose metabolism.

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Carol Buettger

University of Pennsylvania

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Charles A. Stanley

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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E. Davis

University of Pennsylvania

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Fabrizio Barbetti

Boston Children's Hospital

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Ali Naji

University of Pennsylvania

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Bryan A. Wolf

University of Pennsylvania

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