Polonsky K S
Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Diabetes. 1995 Jun;44(6):705-17. doi: 10.2337/diab.44.6.705.
Pancreatic insulin secretion rates can be accurately derived by mathematical deconvolution of peripheral C-peptide concentrations either by using individual C-peptide kinetic parameters obtained by analysis of the decay curve of biosynthetic human C-peptide or by using published group parameters with appropriate adjustments for age and degree of obesity. Since the cross-reactivity of proinsulin and related peptides is low (< 10%) in many C-peptide assays, this experimental approach avoids the spurious increase in insulin immunoreactivity resulting from cross-reactivity with proinsulin and related peptides in the insulin assay. Application of this technique has demonstrated that the phenotypic expression of beta-cell dysfunction differs in subjects with different genetic mechanisms of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). Subjects who have maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) due to mutations in the glucokinase gene demonstrate different patterns of altered insulin secretion when compared with subjects who have mutations in the MODY1 gene on chromosome 20. Glucokinase mutations affect the ability of the beta-cell to detect and respond to small increases in glucose above the basal level. However, compensatory mechanisms operative in vivo, which include a priming effect of glucose on insulin secretion, limit the severity of the observed insulin secretory defect, resulting in a generally mild clinical course in these subjects. In contrast, mutations in the MODY1 gene are associated with an inability to increase insulin secretion as the plasma glucose concentration increases above 7-8 mmol/l and the normal priming effect of glucose on insulin secretion is lost. These characteristics of the dose-response relationships between glucose and insulin secretion result in a more severe degree of hyperglycemia than observed in subjects with glucokinase mutations, and these subjects more frequently need insulin treatment. These alterations are evident in prediabetic subjects with normal glucose levels who carry the MODY1 mutation, suggesting that defective beta-cell function is the primary pathogenetic defect in the diabetic syndrome in these subjects. Studies performed in the classic form of NIDDM demonstrate that subjects with mild glucose intolerance and normal fasting glucose concentrations and glycosylated hemoglobin levels consistently demonstrate defective beta-cell function. These results are consistent with studies in the Zucker diabetic fatty rat, an animal model of NIDDM in which prediabetic animals demonstrate extensive alterations in expression of multiple genes involved in the regulation of insulin secretion. It thus appears that abnormal beta-cell function is present at a relatively early stage in the evolution of NIDDM, even before the onset of overt hyperglycemia.
胰腺胰岛素分泌率可通过对外周C肽浓度进行数学反卷积精确得出,方法是使用通过分析生物合成人C肽的衰变曲线获得的个体C肽动力学参数,或者使用已发表的群体参数并针对年龄和肥胖程度进行适当调整。由于在许多C肽检测中胰岛素原及相关肽的交叉反应性较低(<10%),这种实验方法避免了胰岛素检测中因与胰岛素原及相关肽交叉反应导致的胰岛素免疫反应性假性升高。应用该技术已证明,在非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(NIDDM)具有不同遗传机制的受试者中,β细胞功能障碍的表型表达有所不同。与20号染色体上MODY1基因突变的受试者相比,因葡萄糖激酶基因突变导致青少年发病的成年型糖尿病(MODY)受试者表现出不同模式的胰岛素分泌改变。葡萄糖激酶突变影响β细胞检测和响应基础水平以上葡萄糖小幅升高的能力。然而,体内起作用的代偿机制,包括葡萄糖对胰岛素分泌的启动效应,限制了所观察到的胰岛素分泌缺陷的严重程度,导致这些受试者的临床病程通常较为轻微。相比之下,MODY1基因突变与血浆葡萄糖浓度高于7 - 8 mmol/l时无法增加胰岛素分泌相关联,并且葡萄糖对胰岛素分泌的正常启动效应丧失。葡萄糖与胰岛素分泌之间剂量反应关系的这些特征导致比葡萄糖激酶基因突变受试者更严重的高血糖程度,并且这些受试者更频繁地需要胰岛素治疗。这些改变在携带MODY1突变的血糖水平正常的糖尿病前期受试者中很明显,表明β细胞功能缺陷是这些受试者糖尿病综合征的主要致病缺陷。在经典形式的NIDDM中进行的研究表明,轻度葡萄糖耐量异常且空腹血糖浓度和糖化血红蛋白水平正常的受试者始终表现出β细胞功能缺陷。这些结果与在Zucker糖尿病肥胖大鼠(一种NIDDM动物模型)中的研究一致,在该模型中,糖尿病前期动物在参与胰岛素分泌调节的多个基因的表达方面表现出广泛改变。因此,似乎在NIDDM演变的相对早期阶段,甚至在明显高血糖发作之前,就存在异常的β细胞功能。