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Acta Physiologica Congress

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Acta Physiologica 2012; Volume 206, Supplement 693
Joint FEPS and Spanish Physiological Society Scientific Congress 2012
9/8/2012-9/11/2012
Santiago de Compostela, Spain


LEPTIN AND FASTING REGULATE RAT GASTRIC GLUCOSE-REGULATED PROTEIN 58
Abstract number: P28

Bravo1 SB, Caminos2 JE, Gonzalez1 CR, Vazquez1 MJ, Garces2 MF, Cepeda2 LA, Garcia-Rendueles1 ME, Iglesias-Gamarra3 AJ, Gomez-Diaz4 C, Lopez1 M, Castano5 JP, Dieguez1 C, Nogueiras1 R

1Department of Physiology - CIMUS, School of Medicine, Universidad de Santiago de Compostela,
2Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Universidad Nacional de Colombia,
3Department of Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, Universidad Nacional de Colombia,
4Central Service of Proteomic Unity for Research, Universidad de Cordoba, Espaa,
5Department of Cell Biology, Physiology, and Immunology, Universidad de Cordoba, Espaa

Objectives: 

The stomach secretes a wide range of peptides with essential metabolic functions, and thereby plays an important role in the regulation of energy homeostasis. Disulfide isomerase glucose-regulated protein 58 (GRp58) is a molecular chaperone member of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress signaling pathway, which is a marker for human gastric cancer. We assessed the gene expression of GRp58 under different physiological settings known to be associated with energy homeostasis (fasting, leptin treatment and leptin deficiency).

Materials: 

Since GRp58 seems to be regulated by a phosphorylation/dephosphorylation pattern shift, we used the 2DE gel methodology and peptide mass fingerprinting-protein identification by means of MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry

Results: 

We show that gastric mucosa GRp58 is dephosphorylated by fasting, and this effect is blunted when fasted rats are treated with leptin.

Conclusions: 

We found that intraperitoneal administration of leptin increases whereas leptin deficiency decreases GRp58 mRNA levels. However, GRp58 expression remains unchanged after fasting, indicating that leptin actions on GRp58 are no direct sensitivity to fasting. Dissection of the molecular pathways mediating the interactions between ER stress-related factors and nutrient availability, as well as their target genes, may open a new avenue for the study of obesity and other metabolic disorders.

To cite this abstract, please use the following information:
Acta Physiologica 2012; Volume 206, Supplement 693 :P28

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