Nicholas Morton
Queen's University
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Frontiers in Endocrinology | 2014
Xiaoxia Liu; Sophie Turban; Roderick N. Carter; Shakil Ahmad; Lynne Ramage; Scott P. Webster; Brian R. Walker; Jonathan R. Seckl; Nicholas Morton
Progression and severity of type 1 diabetes is dependent upon inflammatory induction of nitric oxide production and consequent pancreatic β-cell damage. Glucocorticoids (GCs) are highly effective anti-inflammatory agents but have been precluded in type 1 diabetes and in islet transplantation protocols because they exacerbated insulin resistance and suppressed β-cell insulin secretion at the high-doses employed clinically. In contrast, physiological-range elevation of GC action within β-cells ameliorated lipotoxic β-cell failure in transgenic mice overexpressing the intracellular enzyme 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (MIP-HSD1tg/+ mice). Here, we tested the hypothesis that elevated β-cell 11beta-HSD1 protects against the β-cell destruction elicited by streptozotocin (STZ), a toxin that dose-dependently mimics aspects of inflammatory and autoimmune β-cell destruction. MIP-HSD1tg/+ mice exhibited an episodic protection from the severe hyperglycemia caused by a single high dose of STZ associated with higher and sustained β-cell survival, maintained β-cell replicative potential, higher plasma and islet insulin levels, reduced inflammatory macrophage infiltration and increased anti-inflammatory T regulatory cell content. MIP-HSD1tg/+ mice also completely resisted mild hyperglycemia and insulitis induced by multiple low-dose STZ administration. In vitro, MIP-HSD1tg/+ islets exhibited attenuated STZ-induced nitric oxide production, an effect reversed with a specific 11beta-HSD1 inhibitor. GC regeneration selectively within β-cells protects against inflammatory β-cell destruction, suggesting therapeutic targeting of 11beta-HSD1 may ameliorate processes that exacerbate type 1 diabetes and that hinder islet transplantation.
Endocrinology | 2006
Valerie S. Densmore; Nicholas Morton; John J. Mullins; Jonathan R. Seckl
Archive | 2003
Nicholas Morton; Jonathan R. Seckl; Brian R. Walker; Ruth Andrew
Society for Endocrinology BES 2017 | 2017
Jessica R. Ivy; Emma Batchen; Roderick N. Carter; Nicholas Morton; Karen Chapman
Society for Endocrinology BES 2016 | 2016
Syed Furquan Ahmad; Roderick N. Carter; Frances Collins; Erin Greaves; Nicholas Morton; Philippa Saunders; Andrew W. Horne
Archive | 2013
R. Walker; W. Livingstone; Rebecca L. Aucott; Moffat Nyirenda; John P. Iredale; P. Macfarlane; Xiantong Zou; Ruth Andrew; Nicholas Morton; E Dawn
Society for Endocrinology BES 2010 | 2010
Frida Nilsson; Hamish Morrison; Lynne Ramage; Nicholas Morton; Jonathan R. Seckl; Steven D. Morley; Christopher J. Kenyon
Society for Endocrinology BES 2010 | 2010
Sophie Turban-Rajaonah; Xiaoxia Liu; Lynne Ramage; John J. Mullins; Jonathan Seckl; Nicholas Morton
Society for Endocrinology BES 2008 | 2008
Elaine Marshall; Tak Yung Man; Nicholas Morton; Christopher J. Kenyon; Jonathan Seckl; Karen Chapman
Society for Endocrinology BES 2008 | 2008
Cristina L. Esteves; Nicholas Morton; Jonathan Seckl; Karen Chapman