This article originally posted 24 May, 2005 and appeared in Issue 261
The Fat Connection To Beta Cell Burnout
Besides insulin, fat can also cause beta cell burnout.
Advertisement
One out of 12 people in the western world suffers from type 2 (adult onset) diabetes.
Worldwide, 150 million people are diabetic and their numbers are expected to double
in the next 20 years, a result of the growing obesity epidemic. Yet, the reasons
for the strong correlation between excess body fat and diabetes have been puzzling
researchers. Scientists at the Weizmann Institute of Science and the University
of Umea, Sweden, have now unraveled a mechanism by which fat contributes to the
onset of the disease.
Type 2 diabetes is a complex disease characterized by the body’s inability
to efficiently utilize sugar. Two stages of the disease have been identified:
In the first, “silent” stage, the body’s cells lose their ability
to respond properly to the crucial hormone insulin, which is responsible for moving
sugar from the blood into cells. If sugar remains in the bloodstream, the insulin-producing
beta cells in the pancreas compensate by stepping up production. Eventually this
leads to beta cell exhaustion, reduced insulin output and the appearance of full-blown
diabetes.
Elevated fat in the bloodstream appears to accelerate both stages of the disease;
but exactly how does this happen? The culprit may be a receptor known as GPR40
found on the outer surface of pancreatic beta cells. GPR40 was recently discovered
to respond to fatty acids, alerting beta cells to their presence in the bloodstream.
Beta cells were known to be attuned to changes in blood glucose levels, responding
to after-meal glucose surges with a sharp increase in insulin production. But
when fat is present in addition to sugar, the GPR40 receptor causes even greater
insulin output. Frequent overstimulation of the beta cells may be tied to persistently
elevated insulin levels, hastening the onset of the disease.
How does this destructive cycle begin? To understand GPR40’s role, Prof.
Michael Walker and students Nir Rubins and Reut Bartoov-Shifman of the Weizmann
Institute’s Biological Chemistry Department teamed up with Prof. Helena
Edlund and post-doctoral fellow Dr. Per Steneberg of the University of Umea. Together,
they developed two types of lab mice with modified GPR40 activity. In the first,
the scientists used a technique known as gene knock-out to prevent production
of the GPR40 receptor. The second type had overactive GPR40 genes creating a surfeit
of fat-signaling receptors that tricked the beta cells into sensing high fatty
acid levels, even on a normal diet.
Throughout the trial, the GPR40 knock-out mice remained healthy, apparently suffering
no ill-effects from the deletion of the receptor, even when the fat content of
their diet was raised substantially. In contrast, normal mice on a high-fat diet
displayed typical symptoms of the first stage of diabetes. But strikingly, in
the animals with extra GPR40 receptors, the disease progression was swift: They
soon began to exhibit the classic symptoms of full blown diabetes, including failure
of the beta cells to produce adequate amounts of insulin.
Prof. Walker: “These studies show that excessive GPR40 action can trigger
each of the two stages of the disease. Our results establish GPR40 as an important
link between obesity and diabetes. This gives us a new tool to combat the diabetes
epidemic: For example, it might be possible in the future to treat the condition
using drugs that block the action of this receptor.”
April issue, 2005 of Cell Metabolism.
================================
FACT: New AACE Report Reveals America's Diabetes Health
is in Jeopardy
A first-of-its-kind Report released last week by the American Association of
Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) revealed that from 2003 to 2004, two out of
three Americans with type 2 diabetes, analyzed in a study of more than 157,000
patients, were not in control of their blood sugar, failing to meet AACE’s
target A1C goal of 6.5% or less. In addition, a state-by-state ranking of blood
sugar control – contained in the new “State of Diabetes in America”
Report – shows that there is significant room for improvement in diabetes
management as the majority of people studied in every state, including the District
of Columbia, were not in control of their blood sugar levels. The new Report
was presented at AACE’s 14 th Annual Meeting and Clinical Congress.
Print This Week's Newsletter
Download This Week's Newsletter
Newsletter is in Adobe format
If you don't haveAdobe Acrobat Reader
, you can download it for Free
here
.
Free CE Available
CE Programs On Diabetes Available
here
DISCLAIMER: The content of this Website is independent of the views of our advertisers and sponsors. The site is designed primarily for use by qualified physicians and other medical professionals. The information contained herein should NOT be used as a substitute for the advice of an appropriately qualified and licensed physician or other health care provider. The information provided here is for educational and informational purposes only. In no way should it be considered as offering medical advice. Please check with a physician if you suspect you are ill.