A copy deoxyribonucleic acid (cDNA) clone of the immediate early growth response gene,
egr-1 (Krox-24, Zif268, NGFI-1), was isolated through subtractive hybridization screening to identify glucose-induced genes in
pancreatic beta cells. Glucose rapidly and transiently induced
egr-1 mRNA in the SV40-transformed murine beta-cell line, MIN6. Glucose also increased
egr-1 mRNA expression in INS-1,
βTC3 and RINm5F beta-cell lines, although with different kinetics. Expression of the 82 kDa Egr-1 protein was induced both
in MIN6 cells stimulated with glucose in vitro and in primary rat islet cells stimulated in vivo or in vitro. This response
is unique to beta cells since glucose did not affect
egr-1 expression in NIH-3T3 fibroblasts or glucose-sensitive hepatocytes. In beta cells
egr-1 induction is specifically associated with insulin secretion, as it was not observed after stimulation with serum or insulin
but was elicited by insulin secretagogues, including membrane depolarizing agents and cAMP agonists. Moreover, induction of
egr-1 by glucose was inhibited by EDTA, indicating dependence on influx of extracellular Ca
2+. Other immediate early response genes,
c-fos and
junB, were also induced following glucose stimulation with kinetics similar to
egr-1, whereas
c-jun and
junD expression were not affected. Since the zinc-finger protein encoded by
egr-1 is highly homologous to transcription factors that control expression of glucose-regulated genes in yeast, Egr-1 could mediate
delayed adaptive responses of beta cells to sustained glucose stimulation through transcriptional regulation. [Diabetologia
(1999) 42: 195–203]
Keywords Glucose stimulation - beta-cell line - MIN6 - transcription factor - Egr-1.
Received: 19 March 1998 and in revised form: 10 June 1998