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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 292: E281-E291, 2007. First published September 5, 2006; doi:10.1152/ajpendo.00129.2006
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GLP-2 rapidly activates divergent intracellular signaling pathways involved in intestinal cell survival and proliferation in neonatal piglets

Douglas G. Burrin, Barbara Stoll, Xinfu Guan, Liwei Cui, Xiaoyan Chang, and Darryl Hadsell

United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service Children's Nutrition Research Center, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas

Submitted 17 March 2006 ; accepted in final form 30 August 2006

We previously demonstrated the dose-dependent glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-2 activation of intracellular signals associated with increased epithelial cell survival and proliferation in the neonatal intestine. Our current aim was to quantify the acute, temporal GLP-2 activation of these key intracellular signals and relate this to changes in epithelial cell survival and proliferation in the neonatal intestine. We studied 29 total parenteral nutrition-fed neonatal piglets infused intravenously with either saline (control) or human GLP-2 (420 µmol·kg–1·h–1) for 1, 4, or 48 h. GLP-2 infusion increased small intestinal weight, DNA and protein content, and villus height at 48 h, but not at 1 or 4 h. Intestinal crypt and villus apoptosis decreased and crypt cell proliferation and protein synthesis increased linearly with duration of GLP-2 infusion, but were statistically different from controls only after 48 h. Before the morphological and cellular kinetic changes, GLP-2 rapidly activated putative GLP-2 receptor downstream signals within 1–4 h, including phosphorylation of protein kinase A, protein kinase B, extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2, and the transcription factors cAMP response element-binding protein and c-Fos. GLP-2 rapidly suppressed caspase-3 activation and upregulated Bcl-2 abundance within 1 h, whereas there was an increase in apoptosis inhibitors X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis at 1 h and cellular inhibitor of apoptosis-2 at 4 and 48 h. We also show that the increased c-Fos and reduced active caspase-3 immunostaining after GLP-2 infusion was localized in epithelial cells. We conclude that GLP-2-induced activation of intracellular signals involved in both cell survival and proliferation occurs rapidly and precedes the trophic cellular kinetic effects that occur later in intestinal epithelial cells.

glucagon-like peptide-2; total parenteral nutrition



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: D. G. Burrin, Children's Nutrition Research Center, 1100 Bates St., Houston, TX 77030 (e-mail: dburrin{at}bcm.tmc.edu)




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Am. J. Physiol. Endocrinol. Metab.Home page
P. E. Dube and P. L. Brubaker
Frontiers in glucagon-like peptide-2: multiple actions, multiple mediators
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab, August 1, 2007; 293(2): E460 - E465.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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