Abstract

Our aim is to investigate the role of the AKT/PKB (protein kinase B) signaling pathway acting via orexin receptor 1 (OX1R) and the effects of orexin A (OXA) on cell proliferation in the insulin-secreting beta-cell line (INS-1 cells). Rat INS-1 cells were exposed to different concentrations of OXA in vitro and treated with OX1R antagonist (SB334867), PI3K antagonist (wortmannin), AKT antagonist (PF-04691502), or negative control. INS-1 amount of cell proliferation, viability and apoptosis, insulin secretion, OX1R protein expression, caspase-3 activity, and AKT protein levels were determined. We report that OXA (10−10 to 10−6 M) stimulates INS-1 cell proliferation and viability, reduces the proapoptotic activity of caspase-3 to protect against apoptotic cell death, and increases insulin secretion. Additionally, AKT phosphorylation was stimulated by OXA (10−10 to 10−6 M). However, the OX1R antagonist SB334867 (10−6 M), the PI3K antagonist wortmannin (10−8 M), the AKT antagonist PF-04691502 (10−6 M), or the combination of both abolished the effects of OXA to a certain extent. These results suggest that the upregulation of OXA-OX1R mediated by AKT activation may inhibit cell apoptosis and promote cell proliferation in INS-1 cells. This finding provides functional evidence of the biological actions of OXA in rat insulinoma cells.

Highlights

  • Orexin A and orexin B (OXA and OXB), known as hypocretin-1 and hypocretin-2, are peptides that were initially discovered by orphan receptor technologies [1] and/or substrative cDNA cloning [2]

  • Real-time PCR assays demonstrated that OX1R mRNA was endogenously expressed in INS-1 cells (Figure 1(a))

  • This study investigated the orexin A (OXA)-induced improvement of cell proliferation in INS-1 rat insulinoma cells

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Summary

Introduction

Orexin A and orexin B (OXA and OXB), known as hypocretin-1 and hypocretin-2, are peptides that were initially discovered by orphan receptor technologies [1] and/or substrative cDNA cloning [2]. Orexins are restricted to the hypothalamus, but are detected in peripheral tissues including adipose tissue, the endocrine cells of the gut, adrenal gland testis, and the pancreas [4,5,6,7,8]. They exert biological functions that are involved in food intake, sleep-wake behaviors, arousal, energy balance, and energy expenditure [1, 2, 9, 10]. OXA may act as a regulatory peptide taking part in both cell proliferation and apoptosis

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