A common high-blood-pressure medication appears to reverse the diabetes-related death of pancreatic beta cells, according to a University of Alabama at Birmingham study published today in the journal Diabetes.
The authors argue that the findings – while in human pancreatic islets and diabetic mice – could have clinical implications as physicians consider that calcium channel blockers may address two major, related diseases. They also found evidence in past clinical trials that the study drug verapamil may slow diabetes.
Beta cells secrete insulin to control blood sugar levels, but begin to die as patients develop Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes. No one suspected that calcium channel blockers might reverse beta cell death because the studies that led to their FDA approval measured their effect on heart attacks, not blood sugar. UAB researchers were surprised to find hints of verapamil’s effect amid their effort to design a drug to shut down a protein called TXNIP.
The team had published several papers over 10 years describing how high blood sugar uniquely turns on the gene for TXNIP, and how excessive TXNIP-signaling in diabetes signals cells to self-destruct. Recent studies also have suggested that lowering TXNIP levels in the heart lessens the damage caused by a heart attack.
“We long have felt that finding an oral medication that inhibits beta cell TXNIP expression would represent a major breakthrough, and now we have the first study showing that a drug already proven safe in years of clinical practice may halt the development of diabetes,” said Anath Shalev, M.D., director of the UAB Comprehensive Diabetes Center and senior author of the paper. “Our results are encouraging because patients with diabetes suffer from beta cell death as part of their disease, there has been no treatment targeting this problem and TXNIP-inhibition promises to reverse it.”
Of the nearly 26 million adult patients with diabetes, 67 percent also have high blood pressure.
Based on its findings, the UAB team has redoubled its original effort to design a new class of TXNIP-inhibitors. In partnership with the Southern Research Institute and the Alabama Drug Discovery Alliance, they are now screening a library of 300,000 molecules, a search they hope will yield drug candidates that reverse beta cell death without affecting blood pressure.
Only when necessary
In cell studies, the team found that verapamil reduced TXNIP gene expression by 50 percent. In diabetic mice, verapamil treatment maintained normal glucose level, while glucose spiked in control mice. This was accompanied by an 80 percent reduction in TXNIP levels in isolated islets of verapamil-treated animals.
Using molecular biology techniques, researchers were able to watch as expression of TXNIP, or thioredoxin-interacting protein, rose in beta cells to abnormal levels as mice became diabetic and then fell again as they received verapamil.
The team also found that treatment only reduced TXNIP gene expression when high blood sugar had driven it to abnormal levels, making the pathway “extremely attractive” as a target for drugs, Shalev said. Future treatments conceivably could return TXNIP levels to normal in diabetic patients, but leave in place the basic level of TXNIP-signaling that cells rely on to regulate life processes. The results also suggest the drug is able to slow diabetes in mice with longstanding disease and is more effective when given early.
“The debate now should begin as to whether physicians should consider verapamil an additional treatment to protect beta cells in patients with both hypertension and diabetes, similar to the use of ACE inhibitors for kidney protection,” said Shalev, who also is a clinician. “As it stands, it can take years before patients with diabetes receive verapamil, possibly missing a window of opportunity. Future clinical studies need to test whether or not earlier treatment could have a profound effect on diabetes progression by saving more beta cells.”
Though no one had previously established the link between calcium channel-blockers, TXNIP and beta cell death, past studies had hinted at a connection. Analysis of the INVEST trial revealed that newly diagnosed diabetes was less common in patients treated with verapamil, especially in the Hispanic population.
In addition to protecting insulin-producing cells, experiments also showed that verapamil countered insulin-resistance that makes the hormone less able to lower blood-sugar levels in diabetic patients. Theory has it that lowering TXNIP levels counters this by increasing glucose uptake in the tissues targeted by insulin (e.g. muscle and fat), a phenomenon observed in mice lacking the TXNIP gene.
Shalev’s team spent years establishing TXNIP as the mandatory link between high blood sugar and beta cell death. The effort reached its first milestone in 2002 in a study that demonstrated the gene for TXNIP had the greatest increase in expression —11-fold greater than any of the 6,000 genes expressed in pancreatic islets — in the face of rising glucose levels. In 2005, the team identified the DNA region that turns on the TXNIP gene in response to high sugar in beta cells and later showed that the carbohydrate response element-binding protein (ChREBP) attaches to DNA there.
Their next paper in 2008 revealed that genetic deletion of TXNIP protects against Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes and too much TXNIP-signaling shuts down the Akt/Bcl-xL pathway that keeps beta cells alive.
TXNIP stands for thioredoxin-interacting protein, and the overactive TXNIP signaling seen in diabetes sharply reduces the antioxidant activity of the protein thioredoxin. The team had found previously that that higher TXNIP levels in the mitochondria of beta cells increase the chances it will pull thioredoxin off of the protein it would otherwise shut down, apoptosis-signaling kinase 1. Once free, this enzyme initiates a chain reaction that ends in beta cell death.
Shalev’s team also has now shown that calcium channel-blockers inhibit signaling through the enzyme calcineurine, which increases ChREBP phosphorylation and keeps it from getting into the beta cell nucleus. With less ChREBP, extra TXNIP gene expression is shut down.
In Shalev’s lab, post-doctoral fellow Guanlan Xu, Ph.D., performed all key cell studies, and research associates Junqin Chen, Ph.D., and Gu Jing, Ph.D., helped with the mouse studies and protein work. The work was supported by Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation & JNJSI, American Diabetes Association and National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health.