Elbein S C, Hasstedt S J, Wegner K, Kahn S E
Endocrinology Section, John L. McClellan Memorial Veterans Affairs Hospital, Little Rock, Arkansas 72205, USA.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1999 Apr;84(4):1398-403. doi: 10.1210/jcem.84.4.5604.
Both defective insulin secretion and insulin resistance have been reported in relatives of type 2 diabetic subjects. We tested 120 members of 26 families with a type 2 diabetic sibling pair with a tolbutamide-modified, frequently sampled i.v. glucose tolerance test to determine the insulin sensitivity index (S(I)) and acute insulin response to glucose (AIRglucose). A measure of beta-cell compensation for insulin sensitivity was calculated as the product S(I) x AIRglucose, based on the demonstrated hyperbolic relationship between insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion. A percentile score for this compensation was assigned based on published values. Of the 120 family members, 26 had previously diagnosed impaired glucose tolerance on oral testing, and 94 had normal glucose tolerance tests. As a group, family members showed a significantly lower S(I) x AIRglucose than a similar, previously reported, control population, even when impaired glucose tolerance members were excluded. We performed a multivariate analysis of diabetes status, S(I), AIRglucose and to estimate the heritability of each trait and the genetic and environmental correlations between traits. We estimated the heritability of S(I) x AIRglucose to be 67 +/- 3% when all members were included and 70 +/- 4% when only normal glucose tolerance members were considered. Both AIRglucose and S(I) were also familial, albeit with lower heritabilities (38 +/- 1% and 38 +/- 2%, respectively, for all family members). Both S(I) x AIRglucose and S(I) showed strong negative genetic correlations with diabetes (-85 +/- 3% and -87 +/- 2%, respectively, all family members), whereas AIRglucose did not correlate with diabetes. We conclude that insulin secretion, as measured by S(I) x AIRglucose, is decreased in nondiabetic members of familial type 2 diabetic kindreds, that S(I) x AIRglucose in these high risk families is highly heritable, and that the same polygenes may determine diabetes status and a low S(I) x AIRglucose. Our data suggest that insulin secretion, when expressed as an index normalized for insulin sensitivity, is more familial than either insulin sensitivity or first phase insulin secretion alone and may be a very useful trait for identifying genetic predisposition to type 2 diabetes.
在2型糖尿病患者的亲属中,已报道存在胰岛素分泌缺陷和胰岛素抵抗。我们对26个家庭的120名成员进行了检测,这些家庭中均有一对2型糖尿病同胞,采用甲苯磺丁脲改良的、频繁采样的静脉葡萄糖耐量试验来测定胰岛素敏感性指数(S(I))和对葡萄糖的急性胰岛素反应(AIRglucose)。基于已证实的胰岛素敏感性与胰岛素分泌之间的双曲线关系,将β细胞对胰岛素敏感性的代偿指标计算为S(I)×AIRglucose。根据已发表的值为该代偿指标指定百分位数得分。在这120名家庭成员中,26人之前经口服测试诊断为糖耐量受损,94人葡萄糖耐量测试正常。作为一个群体,即使排除糖耐量受损的成员,家庭成员的S(I)×AIRglucose仍显著低于先前报道的类似对照人群。我们对糖尿病状态、S(I)、AIRglucose进行了多变量分析,以估计每个性状的遗传度以及性状之间的遗传和环境相关性。当纳入所有成员时,我们估计S(I)×AIRglucose的遗传度为67±3%,仅考虑葡萄糖耐量正常的成员时为70±4%。AIRglucose和S(I)也具有家族性,尽管遗传度较低(所有家庭成员分别为38±1%和38±2%)。S(I)×AIRglucose和S(I)与糖尿病均呈现强负遗传相关性(所有家庭成员分别为-85±3%和-87±2%),而AIRglucose与糖尿病无相关性。我们得出结论,在家族性2型糖尿病亲属的非糖尿病成员中,以S(I)×AIRglucose衡量的胰岛素分泌减少,这些高危家庭中的S(I)×AIRglucose具有高度遗传性,并且相同的多基因可能决定糖尿病状态和低S(I)×AIRglucose。我们的数据表明,当以针对胰岛素敏感性进行标准化的指数来表示时,胰岛素分泌比单独的胰岛素敏感性或第一相胰岛素分泌更具家族性,并且可能是识别2型糖尿病遗传易感性的非常有用的性状。