Scarlett J A, Kolterman O G, Ciaraldi T P, Kao M, Olefsky J M
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1983 Jun;56(6):1195-201. doi: 10.1210/jcem-56-6-1195.
The insulin resistance of type II diabetes mellitus is due to both receptor and postreceptor defects of in vivo insulin action, with the postreceptor defect being the predominant abnormality. Diminished glucose transport has been found in adipocytes from patients with type II diabetes, suggesting that decreased cellular glucose transport activity may be responsible in part for the in vivo postreceptor defect observed in these patients. Recent studies have shown that the in vivo postreceptor defect initially present in patients with Type II diabetes is significantly reversed by insulin therapy. For these reasons, we speculated that the defect in adipocyte glucose transport might also be corrected with exogenous insulin therapy. Therefore, we measured adipocyte 3-O-methylglucose transport in cells from five type II diabetic subjects before and after a 2-week period of intensive insulin treatment. Glycemic control was significantly improved by this regimen. The mean (+/- SE) fasting serum glucose level fell from 292 +/- 24 to 135 +/- 29 mg/100 ml (P less than 0.005), and the mean integrated glucose area under a 7-h meal tolerance test curve decreased from 171,212 +/- 20,403 to 72,408 +/- 9,292 mg/min . dl. The mean 3-O-methylglucose transport activity increased after treatment at all insulin concentrations studied, including basal (before, 0.18 +/- 0.05; after, 0.45 +/- 0.09 pmol/2 X 10(5) cells . 10 sec; P less than 0.005) and maximally effective (25 ng/ml) insulin concentrations (before, 0.50 +/- 0.14; after, 1.32 +/- 0.30 pmol/2 X 10(5) cells . 10 sec; P less than 0.025), although the mean maximal glucose transport activity was still 25% decreased compared to normal values, indicating that a residual in vitro postreceptor defect remained. These results corresponded well with the degree of reversal (75%) of the in vivo postreceptor defect, as assessed by the euglycemic glucose clamp technique. These studies demonstrated that the decrease in adipocyte glucose transport activity in type II diabetes is practically reversible by intensive insulin therapy. This closely corresponds to the reversal by insulin therapy of the postreceptor defect expressed in vivo and provides further evidence that a cellular cause of the postreceptor defect in type II diabetes is a decrease in glucose transport system activity in the major insulin target tissues.
II型糖尿病的胰岛素抵抗是由于体内胰岛素作用的受体及受体后缺陷所致,其中受体后缺陷是主要异常。在II型糖尿病患者的脂肪细胞中发现葡萄糖转运减少,这表明细胞葡萄糖转运活性降低可能部分导致了这些患者体内观察到的受体后缺陷。最近的研究表明,II型糖尿病患者最初存在的体内受体后缺陷通过胰岛素治疗可得到显著改善。基于这些原因,我们推测脂肪细胞葡萄糖转运缺陷也可能通过外源性胰岛素治疗得到纠正。因此,我们测量了5名II型糖尿病患者在强化胰岛素治疗2周前后脂肪细胞的3 - O - 甲基葡萄糖转运。通过该治疗方案,血糖控制得到显著改善。空腹血清葡萄糖平均水平(±标准误)从292±24降至135±29mg/100ml(P<0.005),7小时进餐耐量试验曲线下的平均葡萄糖积分面积从171,212±20,403降至72,408±9,292mg/min·dl。在所有研究的胰岛素浓度下,包括基础胰岛素浓度(治疗前,0.18±0.05;治疗后,0.45±0.09pmol/2×10⁵细胞·10秒;P<0.005)和最大有效胰岛素浓度(25ng/ml)(治疗前,0.50±0.14;治疗后,1.32±0.30pmol/2×10⁵细胞·10秒;P<0.025),治疗后平均3 - O - 甲基葡萄糖转运活性均增加,尽管平均最大葡萄糖转运活性仍比正常值低25%,表明体外仍存在残余的受体后缺陷。这些结果与通过正常血糖葡萄糖钳夹技术评估的体内受体后缺陷75%的改善程度非常吻合。这些研究表明,II型糖尿病中脂肪细胞葡萄糖转运活性的降低通过强化胰岛素治疗实际上是可逆的。这与胰岛素治疗对体内表达的受体后缺陷的改善密切相关,并进一步证明II型糖尿病受体后缺陷的细胞原因是主要胰岛素靶组织中葡萄糖转运系统活性降低。