Abstract
Alterations in the functional capacity of pancreatic beta cells appear to contribute to coxsackievirus B4-induced, long-term hyperglycemia in mice. Mice infected with prototype B4 or its diabetogenic E2 variant were monitored for abnormalities in sugar metabolism (by the glucose tolerance test), for total protein and insulin synthesis in intact beta cells, for alterations in beta cell proteins, and for virus replication. The infected mice were hypoglycemic at 72 h postinfection and hyperglycemic at 6 weeks. At 8 weeks postinfection, few of the prototype- but most of the E2-infected mice remained hyperglycemic. Total protein and synthesis of immunoprecipitable insulin decreased during early infection. At 8 weeks postinfection, insulin synthesis in the prototype-infected mice increased almost to the level of control mice. Although insulin synthesis increased likewise in the E2-infected mice, it remained well below the control level. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed the disappearance of many cellular proteins in beta cells from E2-infected mice but of very few in cells from prototype-infected mice at 72 h postinfection. Many of the disappearing proteins reappeared gradually in the E2-infected group. Infectious virus was recovered from the infected beta cells only at 72 h postinfection. Functional impairment in these cells appears to be a factor in virus-induced hyperglycemia.
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