Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.304, No.1, 167-175, 2003
Tetracycline-regulated secretion of human insulin in transfected primary myoblasts
A mechanism for safely regulating transgene expression will be necessary for gene therapy approaches to endocrine disorders. In this study, a two-plasmid tetracycline-inducible system was used to regulate expression of human proinsulin (hppI1) And a mutated proinsulin construct (hppI4, allowing cleavage by furin) in primary rat soleus myoblasts. In hppI1 and hppI4 transient transfections, the presence of 0.01 and 0.1 mug/ml tetracycline for 48 h inhibited pro/insulin secretion to 19-27% and 7-12%, respectively, compared to tetracycline untreated myoblasts. Following a 48 h tetracycline incubation (1.0 mug/ml), pro/insulin secretion in hppI1 and hppI4 transfected myoblasts was reduced to <4% of that in cells incubated without tetracycline. Pro/insulin secretion equivalent to that of untreated cells was restored following tetracycline withdrawal and incubation for a further 72 h. Conversion of proinsulin to insulin in transfected myoblasts was <1% for hppI1 and >45% for hppI4. In conclusion, regulated insulin secretion has been achieved in a dose-dependent and reversible manner in primary myoblasts. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.
Keywords:muscle;myoblast;tetracycline;proinsulin;insulin;plasmid DNA;regulated secretion;primary culture;diabetes;gene therapy