| 03 Septembre 2012
 “Our discovery that anchored enzymes contribute to the regulation of  cellular events that underlie diabetes may help us to move more rapidly  toward new therapies to control this increasingly prevalent metabolic  disease,” commented John Scott, Edwin G. Krebs–Hilma Speights Professor  of Pharmacology at the University of Washington School of Medicine,  Seattle and an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. “The  observation that AKAP 150 functions by coordinating phosphatase  activity in the cell reveals a new role for these anchoring proteins in  the control of glucose metabolism and related metabolic disorders. It  also suggests that new drugs that interfere with the role of anchoring  proteins are possible therapeutic interventions to treat chronic  diseases such as diabetes.” The researchers used imaging techniques as well as genetic modification  of isolated insulin-secreting cells and whole mice to investigate the  impact of anchoring proteins on glucose metabolism and insulin release.  Mice that lacked the gene for the AKAP150 anchoring protein produced  less insulin from beta cells in the islets of Langerhans. However, they  coped better with limited amounts of hormone due to increased  sensitivity to insulin in the target tissues (skeletal muscle). The  scientists showed that these effects are due to a seven-amino-acid  sequence in the anchor protein that directly interacts with the surface  of the phosphatase enzyme. The release of insulin is the main way in which the levels of glucose  are controlled in the body. If it is possible to develop drugs that  target the region where anchoring proteins specifically interact with  phosphatase enzymes it is feasible that insulin sensitivity could be  improved in selected tissues such as skeletal muscle. This would  represent a valuable new molecular control point that might offer  clinical benefits for diabetics, individuals with other metabolic  disorders and patients who are being treated with immunosuppressive  drugs following organ transplantation. Anchored phosphatases modulate glucose homeostasis Simon A. Hinke, Manuel F Navedo, Allison Ulman, Jennifer L Whiting,  Patrick J Nygren, Geng Tian, Antonio J Jimenez-Caliani, Lorene K  Langeberg, Vincenzo Cirulli, Anders Tengholm, Mark L Dell’Acqua, L  Fernando Santana, John D Scott Read the paper: 10.1038/emboj.2012.244 HEIDELBERG, 3 September 2012 – Scientists from the  United States and Sweden have discovered a new control point that could  be important as a drug target for the treatment of diabetes and other  metabolic diseases. A-kinase anchoring proteins or AKAPs are known to  influence the spatial distribution of kinases within the cell, crucial  enzymes that control important molecular events related to the  regulation of glucose levels in the blood. In a new study published in The EMBO Journal,  the team of researchers led by Simon Hinke and John Scott reveal for  the first time that AKAPs influence the levels of glucose in the body by  coordinating the spatial positioning of phosphatases, naturally  occurring enzymes that counteract the effects of kinase enzymes.
HEIDELBERG, 3 September 2012 – Scientists from the  United States and Sweden have discovered a new control point that could  be important as a drug target for the treatment of diabetes and other  metabolic diseases. A-kinase anchoring proteins or AKAPs are known to  influence the spatial distribution of kinases within the cell, crucial  enzymes that control important molecular events related to the  regulation of glucose levels in the blood. In a new study published in The EMBO Journal,  the team of researchers led by Simon Hinke and John Scott reveal for  the first time that AKAPs influence the levels of glucose in the body by  coordinating the spatial positioning of phosphatases, naturally  occurring enzymes that counteract the effects of kinase enzymes.