Beck-Nielsen H, Vaag A, Damsbo P, Handberg A, Nielsen O H, Henriksen J E, Thye-Rønn P
Medical Endocrinological Department, Odense University Hospital, Denmark.
Diabetes Care. 1992 Mar;15(3):418-29. doi: 10.2337/diacare.15.3.418.
Skeletal muscles in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) are resistant to insulin; i.e., the effect of insulin on glucose disposal is reduced compared with the effect in control subjects. This defect has been found to be localized to the nonoxidative pathway of glucose disposal; hence, the deposition of glucose, as glycogen, is abnormally low. This defect may be inherited, because it is present in first-degree relatives to NIDDM patients two to three decades before they develop frank diabetes mellitus. The cellular defects responsible for the abnormal insulin action in NIDDM patients is reviewed in this article. The paper focuses mainly on convalent insulin signaling. Insulin is postulated to stimulate glucose storage by initiating a cascade of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation events, which results in dephosphorylation and hence activation of the enzyme glycogen synthase. Glycogen synthase is the key enzyme in regulation of glycogen synthesis in the skeletal muscles of humans. This enzyme is sensitive to insulin, but in NIDDM patients it has been shown to be completely resistant to insulin stimulation when measured at euglycemia. The enzyme seems to be locked in the glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P)-dependent inactive D-form. This hypothesis is favored by the finding of reduced activity of the glycogen synthase phosphatase and increased activity of the respective kinase cAMP-dependent protein kinase. A reduced glycogen synthase activity has also been found in normoglycemic first-degree relatives of NIDDM patients, indicating that this abnormality precedes development of hyperglycemia in subjects prone to develop NIDDM. Therefore, this defect may be of primary genetic origin. However, it does not appear to be a defect in the enzyme itself, but rather a defect in the covalent activation of the enzyme system. Glycogen synthase is resistant to insulin but may be activated allosterically by G-6-P. This means that the defect in insulin activation can be compensated for by increased intracellular concentrations of G-6-P. In fact, we found that both hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia are able to increase the G-6-P level in skeletal muscles. Thus, insulin resistance in the nonoxidative pathway of glucose processing can be overcomed (compensated) by hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia. In conclusion, we hypothesize that insulin resistance in skeletal muscles may be a primary genetic defect preceding the diabetic state. The cellular abnormality responsible for that may be a reduced covalent insulin activation of the enzyme glycogen synthase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(NIDDM)患者的骨骼肌对胰岛素产生抵抗;也就是说,与对照组相比,胰岛素对葡萄糖代谢的作用减弱。已发现该缺陷定位于葡萄糖代谢的非氧化途径;因此,作为糖原的葡萄糖沉积异常低。这种缺陷可能是遗传性的,因为在NIDDM患者的一级亲属中,早在他们患显性糖尿病前二三十年就已存在。本文综述了导致NIDDM患者胰岛素作用异常的细胞缺陷。本文主要聚焦于胰岛素的共价信号传导。据推测,胰岛素通过引发一系列磷酸化和去磷酸化事件来刺激葡萄糖储存,这会导致糖原合酶去磷酸化从而被激活。糖原合酶是人类骨骼肌中调节糖原合成的关键酶。该酶对胰岛素敏感,但在NIDDM患者中,在血糖正常时测量发现它对胰岛素刺激完全抵抗。该酶似乎锁定在依赖于6-磷酸葡萄糖(G-6-P)的无活性D型状态。糖原合酶磷酸酶活性降低以及相应的激酶cAMP依赖性蛋白激酶活性增加这一发现支持了这一假说。在血糖正常的NIDDM患者一级亲属中也发现糖原合酶活性降低,这表明这种异常在易患NIDDM的个体出现高血糖之前就已存在。因此,这种缺陷可能源于原发性遗传。然而,这似乎并非该酶本身的缺陷,而是酶系统共价激活方面的缺陷。糖原合酶对胰岛素抵抗,但可被G-6-P变构激活。这意味着胰岛素激活缺陷可通过细胞内G-6-P浓度升高得到补偿。事实上,我们发现高胰岛素血症和高血糖都能够提高骨骼肌中的G-6-P水平。因此,葡萄糖处理非氧化途径中的胰岛素抵抗可通过高胰岛素血症和高血糖得以克服(补偿)。总之,我们推测骨骼肌中的胰岛素抵抗可能是糖尿病状态之前的原发性遗传缺陷。导致该现象的细胞异常可能是糖原合酶的胰岛素共价激活降低。(摘要截选至400字)