This article originally posted 05 July, 2005 and appeared in Issue 267
Exercise Can Find Genetic Regions Lnked to Prediabetes
People's bodies respond to exercise in different ways, and their genetic makeup is partly responsible.
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For one, people differ in how greatly exercise alters their blood sugar equilibrium,
an effect demonstrated in a new study by researchers at Washington University
School of Medicine in St. Louis.
The divergence in exercise response allowed the researchers to identify regions
on chromosomes 6, 7, and 19 that are linked to prediabetes.
Prediabetes is characterized by the body's elevated resistance to insulin,
the hormone that regulates blood glucose levels and energy storage. The condition
generally advances to type 2 diabetes as the pancreas works to secrete insulin
to compensate for increased insulin resistance in the body's liver, muscle and
fat cells. When the pancreas can no longer make enough insulin to keep blood
sugar levels down in the normal range, clinically overt type 2 diabetes results.
"There's no question at all that prediabetes and type 2 diabetes have
a genetic basis," says lead author Ping An, M.D., research assistant professor
in genetics and biostatistics. "The rising incidence of type 2 diabetes
makes it more and more important to locate the genes so they can lead to effective
intervention and treatments."
Four hundred and forty-one nondiabetic, sedentary parents and offspring in
98 white and 90 black families were studied. Each participant put aside their
inactive lifestyle for a 20-week, supervised program of aerobic exercise. Researchers
made sophisticated measurements of insulin action and glucose metabolism at
the start of the program and then again after it was done.
"At the end of the exercise program, the insulin sensitivity of the participants
had improved overall--they needed to produce less insulin to handle the same
amount of glucose intake," says An. "But the amount of improvement
varied across families and family members. This variation allowed us to locate
sites on the chromosomes associated with dynamic prediabetes traits."
An area on chromosome 19 showed the strongest link to training response among
black participants. That link was revealed by the effect of exercise on a measurement
of glucose metabolism and indicates the chromosomal location is likely to contain
gene variants that influence the propensity for prediabetes. Very close to the
area identified is a gene vital for storing glucose in the form of glycogen
within skeletal muscles. Patients with type 2 diabetes often have impaired glycogen
storage.
Although not as strong, other links to prediabetes traits were found on chromosomes
6 and 7 among the white participants in the study. These locations have been
shown to contain several genes related to fat and glucose metabolism, insulin
sensitivity and glucose-induced insulin secretion.
"Genetic dissection of type 2 diabetes is challenging because the disease
is affected by many genes and environmental factors like eating habits or amount
of exercise," An says. "We need to employ insightful study designs
and analysis strategies. By selecting nondiabetic, sedentary people and then
looking at their exercise response in this study, we were able to analyze a
unique sample and directly measure insulin secretion and action. What we found
is consistent with other kinds of studies of type 2 diabetes traits, and the
replication of findings from independent studies and samples, although difficult,
is important for establishing genetic links."
The study was part of the HERITAGE (Health, Risk factors, Exercise Training
and Genetics) Family Study, a multicenter study of human genetic variation and
its influence on cardiovascular and metabolic responses to aerobic exercise
training. Initiated by Claude Bouchard, Ph.D., director of the Pennington Biomedical
Research Center in Baton Rouge, the study has a center at Washington University
School of Medicine maintained in the Division of Biostatistics, directed by
D.C. Rao, Ph.D.
Diabetologia 48(6):1142-1149, 2005.
Learn about the Steps To Health, a program to increase physical activity that
has gone through 8 years of clinical studies to show its effectiveness. http://www.steps-to-health.org
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