Lipotoxicity in the Pathogenesis of Obesity-Dependent NIDDM: Genetic and Clinical Implications

  • Roger H Unger
    Department of Internal Medicine, Gilford Laboratories, Center for Diabetes Research at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, and the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center at Dallas Texas

書誌事項

公開日
1995-08-01
DOI
  • 10.2337/diab.44.8.863
公開者
American Diabetes Association

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説明

<jats:p>We review evidence that increased tissue levels of fatty acyl CoA cause the β-cell abnormalities of nondiabetic obesity and ultimately result in obesity-dependent diabetes. Nondiabetic obesity in Zucker rats is characterized by hypersecretion of insulin at normal fasting and subfasting glucose concentrations. This is a result of β-cell hyperplasia and increased low Km glucose usage and oxidation. These abnormalities, the hyperinsulinemia, the hyperplasia of β-cells, i.e., its in vitro equivalent, enhanced bromodeoxyuridine incorporation, and the increased low Km glucose usage can be induced by culturing normal islets with 2 mmol/l free fatty acids (FFAs). Once obese Zucker diabetic fatty rats become diabetic, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) is absent and β-cell GLUT2 reduced. Islet triglyceride (TG) content is increased 10-fold, probably reflecting increased FFA delivery (plasma FFA levels &gt; 1.5 mmol/l) beginning about 2 weeks before the onset of diabetes. These β-cell abnormalities, GSIS loss, GLUT2 loss, and TG accumulation, are prevented by reducing plasma FFAs by caloric restriction and by nicotinamide injection. The loss of GSIS and the accumulation of TGs, but not the GLUT2 loss, can be induced in vitro in normal islets cultured in a 2 mmol/l FFA-containing medium, but prediabetic islets seem far more vulnerable to FFA-induced functional impairment and TG accumulation. It is proposed that in uncomplicated obesity, increased lipid availability (FFA levels &lt;1.5 mmol/1) induces both hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance in parallel fashion, thereby maintaining normoglycemia. A further increase in substrate overload impairs β-cell compensation for insulin resistance and hyperglycemia appears.</jats:p>

収録刊行物

  • Diabetes

    Diabetes 44 (8), 863-870, 1995-08-01

    American Diabetes Association

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