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Diabetic neuropathy: inhibitory G protein dysfunction involves PKC‐dependent phosphorylation of G<sub>oα</sub>
17
Citations
31
References
2003
Year
We examined the hypothesis that decreased inhibitory G protein function in diabetic neuropathy is associated with increased protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent phosphorylation of the Goalpha subunit. Streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats were studied between 4 and 8 weeks after onset of diabetes and compared with aged-matched healthy animals as controls. Opioid-mediated inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP was significantly less in dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) from diabetic rats compared with controls. Activation of PKC in DRGs from control rats was associated with a significant decrease in opioid-mediated inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP that was similar to the decrease in inhibition observed in DRGs from diabetic rats. Both basal and PKC-mediated labeling of Goalpha with 32Pi was significantly less in DRGs from diabetic rats, supporting increased endogenous PKC-dependent phosphorylation of Goalpha. Probing of immunoprecipitated Goalpha with an anti-phospho-serine/threonine specific antibody revealed a significant increase in baseline phosphorylation in diabetic DRGs. Activation of PKC produced a significant increase in phosphorylation in control DRGs but no significant increase in Goalpha in diabetic DRGs. Phosphorylation of PKC-alpha was increased, PKC-betaII was unchanged and PKC-delta decreased in diabetic DRGs. These results suggest that diminished inhibitory G protein function observed in DRGs neurons from diabetic rats involves an isoform-specific PKC-dependent pathway.
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