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Identifiers | |||||||
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Aliases | IAPP, DAP, IAP, islet amyloid polypeptide | ||||||
External IDs | OMIM: 147940 MGI: 96382 HomoloGene: 36024 GeneCards: IAPP | ||||||
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Orthologs | ||||||
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Species | Human | Mouse | ||||
Entrez | ||||||
Ensembl | ||||||
UniProt | ||||||
RefSeq (mRNA) |
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RefSeq (protein) |
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Location (UCSC) | Chr 12: 21.35 – 21.38 Mb | Chr 6: 142.3 – 142.3 Mb | ||||
PubMed search | ||||||
Amylin, or islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP), is a 37-residue peptide hormone. It is cosecreted with insulin from the pancreatic β-cells in the ratio of approximately 100:1 (insulin:amylin). Amylin plays a role in glycemic regulation by slowing gastric emptying and promoting satiety, thereby preventing post-prandial spikes in blood glucose levels.
IAPP is processed from an 89-residue coding sequence. Proislet amyloid polypeptide (proIAPP, proamylin, proislet protein) is produced in the pancreatic beta cells (β-cells) as a 67 amino acid, 7404 Dalton pro-peptide and undergoes post-translational modifications including protease cleavage to produce amylin.
Synthesis
ProIAPP consists of 67 amino acids, which follow a 22 amino acid signal peptide which is rapidly cleaved after translation of the 89 amino acid coding sequence. The human sequence (from N-terminus to C-terminus) is:
(MGILKLQVFLIVLSVALNHLKA) TPIESHQVEKR^ KCNTATCATQRLANFLVHSSNNFGAILSSTNVGSNTYG^ KR^ NAVEVLKREPLNYLPL.
The signal peptide is removed during translation of the protein and
transport into the endoplasmic reticulum. Once inside the endoplasmic
reticulum, a disulfide bond is formed between cysteine residues numbers 2 and 7. Later in the secretory pathway, the precursor undergoes additional proteolysis and posttranslational modification (indicated by ^). 11 amino acids are removed from the N-terminus by the enzyme proprotein convertase 2 (PC2) while 16 are removed from the C-terminus of the proIAPP molecule by proprotein convertase 1/3 (PC1/3). At the C-terminus Carboxypeptidase E then removes the terminal lysine and arginine residues. The terminal glycine amino acid that results from this cleavage allows the enzyme peptidylglycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase (PAM) to add an amine
group. After this the transformation from the precursor protein
proIAPP to the biologically active IAPP is complete (IAPP sequence: KCNTATCATQRLANFLVHSSNNFGAILSSTNVGSNTY)
Regulation
Insulin and IAPP are regulated by similar factors since they share a common regulatory promoter motif. The IAPP promoter is also activated by stimuli which do not affect insulin, such as tumor necrosis factor alpha and fatty acids. One of the defining features of Type 2 diabetes is insulin resistance.
This is a condition wherein the body is unable to utilize insulin
effectively, resulting in increased insulin production; since proinsulin and proIAPP are cosecreted, this results in an increase in the production of proIAPP as well.
Although little is known about IAPP regulation, its connection to
insulin indicates that regulatory mechanisms that affect insulin also
affect IAPP. Thus blood glucose levels play an important role in regulation of proIAPP synthesis.
Function
Amylin functions as part of the endocrine pancreas and contributes to glycemic control.
The peptide is secreted from the pancreatic islets into the blood
circulation and is cleared by peptidases in the kidney. It is not found
in the urine.
Amylin's metabolic function is well-characterized as an inhibitor
of the appearance of nutrient [especially glucose] in the plasma. It thus functions as a synergistic partner to insulin,
with which it is cosecreted from pancreatic beta cells in response to
meals. The overall effect is to slow the rate of appearance (Ra) of
glucose in the blood after eating; this is accomplished via coordinate
slowing down gastric emptying, inhibition of digestive secretion
[gastric acid, pancreatic enzymes, and bile ejection], and a resulting
reduction in food intake. Appearance of new glucose in the blood is
reduced by inhibiting secretion of the gluconeogenic hormone glucagon. These actions, which are mostly carried out via a glucose-sensitive part of the brain stem, the area postrema, may be over-ridden during hypoglycemia. They collectively reduce the total insulin demand.
Amylin also acts in bone metabolism, along with the related peptides calcitonin and calcitonin gene related peptide.
Rodent amylin knockouts do not have a normal reduction of appetite following food consumption. Because it is an amidated peptide, like many neuropeptides, it is believed to be responsible for the effect on appetite.
Structure
The
human form of IAPP has the amino acid sequence
KCNTATCATQRLANFLVHSSNNFGAILSSTNVGSNTY, with a disulfide bridge between
cysteine residues 2 and 7. Both the amidated C-terminus and the
disulfide bridge are necessary for the full biological activity of
amylin. IAPP is capable of forming amyloid fibrils in vitro.
Within the fibrillization reaction, the early prefibrillar structures
are extremely toxic to beta-cell and insuloma cell cultures. Later amyloid
fiber structures also seem to have some cytotoxic effect on cell
cultures. Studies have shown that fibrils are the end product and not
necessarily the most toxic form of amyloid proteins/peptides in general.
A non-fibril forming peptide (1–19 residues of human amylin) is toxic
like the full-length peptide but the respective segment of rat amylin is
not. It was also demonstrated by solid-state NMR spectroscopy that the fragment 20-29 of the human-amylin fragments membranes.
Rats and mice have six substitutions (three of which are proline
substitions at positions 25, 28 and 29) that are believed to prevent the
formation of amyloid fibrils, although not completely as seen by its
propensity to form amyloid fibrils in vitro. Rat IAPP is nontoxic to beta-cells when overexpressed in transgenic rodents.
History
IAPP was identified independently by two groups as the major component of diabetes-associated islet amyloid deposits in 1987.
The difference in nomenclature is largely geographical; European
researchers tend to prefer IAPP whereas American researchers tend to
prefer amylin. Some researchers discourage the use of "amylin" on the
grounds that it may be confused with the pharmaceutical company.
Clinical significance
ProIAPP has been linked to Type 2 diabetes and the loss of islet β-cells. Islet amyloid
formation, initiated by the aggregation of proIAPP, may contribute to
this progressive loss of islet β-cells. It is thought that proIAPP forms
the first granules that allow for IAPP to aggregate and form amyloid
which may lead to amyloid-induced apoptosis of β-cells.
IAPP is cosecreted with insulin. Insulin resistance in Type 2
diabetes produces a greater demand for insulin production which results
in the secretion of proinsulin.
ProIAPP is secreted simultaneously, however, the enzymes that convert
these precursor molecules into insulin and IAPP, respectively, are not
able to keep up with the high levels of secretion, ultimately leading to
the accumulation of proIAPP.
In particular, the impaired processing of proIAPP that occurs at
the N-terminal cleavage site is a key factor in the initiation of
amyloid.
Post-translational modification of proIAPP occurs at both the carboxy
terminus and the amino terminus, however, the processing of the amino
terminus occurs later in the secretory pathway. This might be one reason why it is more susceptible to impaired processing under conditions where secretion is in high demand.
Thus, the conditions of Type 2 diabetes—high glucose concentrations
and increased secretory demand for insulin and IAPP—could lead to the
impaired N-terminal processing of proIAPP. The unprocessed proIAPP can
then serve as the nidus upon which IAPP can accumulate and form amyloid.
The amyloid formation might be a major mediator of apoptosis, or programmed cell death, in the islet β-cells.
Initially, the proIAPP aggregates within secretory vesicles inside the
cell. The proIAPP acts as a seed, collecting matured IAPP within the
vesicles, forming intracellular amyloid. When the vesicles are released,
the amyloid grows as it collects even more IAPP outside the cell. The
overall effect is an apoptosis cascade initiated by the influx of ions
into the β-cells.
In summary, impaired N-terminal processing of proIAPP is an important
factor initiating amyloid formation and β-cell death. These amyloid
deposits are pathological characteristics of the pancreas
in Type 2 diabetes. However, it is still unclear as to whether amyloid
formation is involved in or merely a consequence of type 2 diabetes.
Nevertheless, it is clear that amyloid formation reduces working
β-cells in patients with Type 2 diabetes. This suggests that repairing
proIAPP processing may help to prevent β-cell death, thereby offering
hope as a potential therapeutic approach for Type 2 diabetes.
Amyloid deposits deriving from islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP, or amylin) are commonly found in pancreatic islets of patients suffering diabetes mellitus type 2, or containing an insulinoma cancer. While the association of amylin with the development of type 2 diabetes has been known for some time, its direct role as the cause has been harder to establish. Recent results suggest that amylin, like the related beta-amyloid (Abeta) associated with Alzheimer's disease, can induce apoptotic cell-death in insulin-producing beta cells, an effect that may be relevant to the development of type 2 diabetes.
A 2008 study reported a synergistic effect for weight loss with leptin and amylin coadministration in diet-induced obese rats by restoring hypothalamic sensitivity to leptin.
However, in clinical trials, the study was halted at Phase 2 in 2011
when a problem involving antibody activity that might have neutralized
the weight-loss effect of metreleptin in two patients who took the drug
in a previously completed clinical study. The study combined
metreleptin, a version of the human hormone leptin, and pramlintide,
which is Amylin’s diabetes drug Symlin, into a single obesity therapy. Finally, a recent proteomics study showed that human amylin shares common toxicity targets with beta-amyloid (Abeta), providing evidence that type 2 diabetes and Alzheimer's disease share common toxicity mechanisms.
Pharmacology
A synthetic analog of human amylin with proline substitutions in positions 25, 26 and 29, or pramlintide (brand name Symlin), was approved in 2005 for adult use in patients with both diabetes mellitus type 1 and diabetes mellitus type 2.
Insulin and pramlintide, injected separately but both before a meal,
work together to control the post-prandial glucose excursion.
Amylin is degraded in part by insulin-degrading enzyme.
Receptors
There appear to be at least three distinct receptor complexes that amylin binds to with high affinity. All three complexes contain the calcitonin receptor at the core, plus one of three receptor activity-modifying proteins, RAMP1, RAMP2, or RAMP3.