Cummings Bethany P, Digitale Erin K, Stanhope Kimber L, Graham James L, Baskin Denis G, Reed Benjamin J, Sweet Ian R, Griffen Steven C, Havel Peter J
Department of Molecular Biosciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2008 Dec;295(6):R1782-93. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.90635.2008. Epub 2008 Oct 1.
The prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2DM) is increasing, creating a need for T2DM animal models for the study of disease pathogenesis, prevention, and treatment. The purpose of this project was to develop a rat model of T2DM that more closely models the pathophysiology of T2DM in humans. The model was created by crossing obese Sprague-Dawley rats with insulin resistance resulting from polygenic adult-onset obesity with Zucker diabetic fatty-lean rats that have a defect in pancreatic beta-cell function but normal leptin signaling. We have characterized the model with respect to diabetes incidence; age of onset; longitudinal measurements of glucose, insulin, and lipids; and glucose tolerance. Longitudinal fasting glucose and insulin data demonstrated progressive hyperglycemia (with fasting and fed glucose concentrations >250 and >450 mg/dl, respectively) after onset along with hyperinsulinemia resulting from insulin resistance at onset followed by a progressive decline in circulating insulin concentrations, indicative of beta-cell decompensation. The incidence of diabetes in male and female rats was 92 and 43%, respectively, with an average age of onset of 6 mo in males and 9.5 mo in females. Results from intravenous glucose tolerance tests, pancreas immunohistochemistry, and islet insulin content further support a role for beta-cell dysfunction in the pathophysiology of T2DM in this model. Diabetic animals also exhibit glycosuria, polyuria, and hyperphagia. Thus diabetes in the UC Davis-T2DM rat is more similar to clinical T2DM in humans than in other existing rat models and provides a useful model for future studies of the pathophysiology, treatment, and prevention of T2DM.
2型糖尿病(T2DM)的患病率正在上升,这就需要建立T2DM动物模型来研究疾病的发病机制、预防和治疗。本项目的目的是开发一种更接近人类T2DM病理生理学的大鼠模型。该模型是通过将因多基因成年起病肥胖导致胰岛素抵抗的肥胖斯普拉格-道利大鼠与胰腺β细胞功能有缺陷但瘦素信号正常的 Zucker 糖尿病脂肪瘦大鼠杂交而创建的。我们已从糖尿病发病率、发病年龄、葡萄糖、胰岛素和脂质的纵向测量以及葡萄糖耐量等方面对该模型进行了表征。纵向空腹血糖和胰岛素数据显示,发病后出现进行性高血糖(空腹和进食后血糖浓度分别>250和>450 mg/dl),同时发病时因胰岛素抵抗导致高胰岛素血症,随后循环胰岛素浓度逐渐下降,表明β细胞失代偿。雄性和雌性大鼠的糖尿病发病率分别为92%和43%,雄性大鼠的平均发病年龄为6个月,雌性大鼠为9.5个月。静脉葡萄糖耐量试验、胰腺免疫组织化学和胰岛胰岛素含量的结果进一步支持了β细胞功能障碍在该模型T2DM病理生理学中的作用。糖尿病动物还表现出糖尿、多尿和多食。因此,加州大学戴维斯分校T2DM大鼠的糖尿病比其他现有大鼠模型更类似于人类临床T2DM,为未来T2DM病理生理学、治疗和预防的研究提供了一个有用的模型。