Circulating cathepsin S improves glycaemic control in mice

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Abstract

Cathepsin S (CTSS) is a cysteine protease that regulates many physiological processes and is increased in obesity and type 2 diabetes. While previous studies show that deletion of CTSS improves glycaemic control through suppression of hepatic glucose output, little is known about the role of circulating CTSS in regulating glucose and energy metabolism. We assessed the effects of recombinant CTSS on metab olism in cultured hepatocytes, myotubes and adipocytes, and in mice following acute CTSS administration. CTSS improved glucose tolerance in lean mice and this coincided with increased plasma insulin. CTSS reduced G6pc and Pck1 mRNA expression and glucose output from hepatocytes but did not affect glucose metabolism in myotubes or adipocytes. CTSS did not affect insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells, rather CTSS stimulated glucagonlike peptide (GLP)-1 secretion from intestinal mucosal tissues. CTSS retained its positive effects on glycaemic control in mice injected with the GLP1 rece ptor antagonist Exendin (9-39) amide. The effects of CTSS on glycaemic control were not retained in high-fatfed mice or db/db mice, despite the preservation of CTSS' inhibitory actions on hepatic glucose output in isolated primary hepatocytes. In conclusion, we unveil a role for CTSS in the regulation of glycaemic control via direct effects on hep atocytes, and that these effects on glycaemic control are abrogated in insulin resistant states.

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Karimkhanloo, H., Keenan, S. N., Sun, E. W., Wattchow, D. A., Keating, D. J., Montgomery, M. K., & Watt, M. J. (2021). Circulating cathepsin S improves glycaemic control in mice. Journal of Endocrinology, 248(2), 167–179. https://doi.org/10.1530/JOE-20-0408

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