Olefsky J M, Garvey W T, Henry R R, Brillon D, Matthaei S, Freidenberg G R
Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego 92161.
Am J Med. 1988 Nov 28;85(5A):86-105. doi: 10.1016/0002-9343(88)90401-9.
Recent studies have led to an enhanced understanding of cellular alterations that may play an important role in the pathophysiology of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). The insulin receptor links insulin binding at the cell surface to intracellular activation of insulin's effects. This transducer function involves the tyrosine kinase property of the beta-subunit of the receptor. It was found that adipocytes from subjects with NIDDM had a 50 to 80 percent reduction in insulin-stimulated receptor kinase activity compared with their non-diabetic counterparts. This defect was relatively specific for the diabetic state since no decrease was observed in insulin-resistant non-diabetic obese subjects. The reduction in kinase activity was accounted for by changes in the ratio of two pools of receptors, both of which bind insulin but only one of which is capable of tyrosine autophosphorylation and subsequent kinase activation; 43 percent of the receptors from non-diabetic subjects were capable of autophosphorylation compared with only 14 percent in the NIDDM group. A major component of cellular insulin resistance in NIDDM involves the glucose transport system. Exposure of cells to insulin normally results in enhanced glucose transport mediated by translocation of glucose transporters from a low-density microsomal intracellular pool to the plasma membrane. It was found that cells from NIDDM subjects had a marked depletion of glucose transporters in both plasma membranes and low-density microsomes, relative to obese non-diabetic control participants. Obese non-diabetic persons had a normal number of plasma membrane transporters but a reduced number of low-density microsome transporters in the basal state compared with lean control volunteers; insulin induced the translocation of relatively fewer transporters from the low-density microsome to the plasma membrane in the obese subgroups. In addition to the diminished number of glucose transporters, cells from both NIDDM and obese subjects had impaired functional activity of glucose carriers since decreased whole-cell glucose transport rates could not be entirely explained by the magnitude of the decrement in the number of plasma membrane transporters. Thus, impaired glucose transport is due to both a numerical and functional defect in glucose transporters. The cellular content of high-density microsomal transporters was the same in lean and obese control volunteers and NIDDM subjects, suggesting that transporter synthesis is normal and that cellular depletion results from increased protein turnover once transporters leave the high-density microsomal subfraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
最近的研究增进了我们对细胞改变的理解,这些改变可能在非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(NIDDM)的病理生理学中起重要作用。胰岛素受体将细胞表面的胰岛素结合与胰岛素效应的细胞内激活联系起来。这种转导功能涉及受体β亚基的酪氨酸激酶特性。研究发现,与非糖尿病患者的脂肪细胞相比,NIDDM患者的脂肪细胞在胰岛素刺激下的受体激酶活性降低了50%至80%。这种缺陷对糖尿病状态具有相对特异性,因为在胰岛素抵抗的非糖尿病肥胖受试者中未观察到活性降低。激酶活性的降低是由两类受体比例的变化引起的,这两类受体都能结合胰岛素,但只有一类能够进行酪氨酸自身磷酸化并随后激活激酶;非糖尿病受试者中43%的受体能够进行自身磷酸化,而NIDDM组中只有14%。NIDDM患者细胞胰岛素抵抗的一个主要成分涉及葡萄糖转运系统。细胞暴露于胰岛素通常会导致葡萄糖转运增强,这是由葡萄糖转运体从低密度微粒体细胞内池转运到质膜介导的。研究发现,相对于肥胖非糖尿病对照参与者,NIDDM患者的细胞在质膜和低密度微粒体中葡萄糖转运体均显著减少。与瘦对照志愿者相比,肥胖非糖尿病个体在基础状态下质膜转运体数量正常,但低密度微粒体转运体数量减少;在肥胖亚组中,胰岛素诱导从低密度微粒体转运到质膜的转运体相对较少。除了葡萄糖转运体数量减少外,NIDDM和肥胖受试者的细胞中葡萄糖载体的功能活性也受损,因为全细胞葡萄糖转运速率的降低不能完全由质膜转运体数量减少的程度来解释。因此,葡萄糖转运受损是由于葡萄糖转运体在数量和功能上的缺陷。高密度微粒体转运体的细胞含量在瘦和肥胖对照志愿者以及NIDDM患者中是相同的,这表明转运体合成正常,细胞内转运体减少是由于转运体离开高密度微粒体亚组分后蛋白质周转增加所致。(摘要截选至400字)