| Literature DB >> 29075333 |
Claudia Pinheiro Sanches1, Andre Gustavo Daher Vianna1,2, Fellype de Carvalho Barreto3.
Abstract
Diabetes complications and osteoporotic fractures are two of the most important causes of morbidity and mortality in older patients and share many features including genetic susceptibility, molecular mechanisms, and environmental factors. Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) compromises bone microarchitecture by inducing abnormal bone cell function and matrix structure, with increased osteoblast apoptosis, diminished osteoblast differentiation, and enhanced osteoclast-mediated bone resorption. The linkage between these two chronic diseases creates a possibility that certain antidiabetic therapies may affect bone quality. Both glycemic and bone homeostasis are under control of common regulatory factors. These factors include insulin, accumulation of advanced glycation end products, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, gastrointestinal hormones (such as the glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide and the glucagon-like peptides 1 and 2), and bone-derived hormone osteocalcin. This background allows individual pharmacological targets for antidiabetic therapies to affect the bone quality due to their indirect effects on bone cell differentiation and bone remodeling process. Moreover, it's important to consider the fragility fractures as another diabetes complication and discuss more deeply about the requirement for adequate screening and preventive measures. This review aims to briefly explore the impact of T2DM on bone metabolic and mechanical proprieties and fracture risk.Entities:
Keywords: Bone metabolism; Bone mineral density; Fracture; Type 2 diabetes
Year: 2017 PMID: 29075333 PMCID: PMC5649056 DOI: 10.1186/s13098-017-0278-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetol Metab Syndr ISSN: 1758-5996 Impact factor: 3.320
Fig. 1The relationship between the accumulation of AGEs within the bone. Increased oxidative stress, high glycemic levels, ageing and reduced bone turnover are the main contributors to increased formation and accumulation of AGEs in bone. They induce an inflammatory process that results in activation of osteoclastogenesis, osteoblast dysfunction and accelerated development of the osteoporosis process
(Adapted from Sanguineti et al. [33])
Fig. 2PPAR regulates mesenchymal cell differentiation. PPAR induces adipogenesis and suppresses osteoblastogenesis, by inhibiting Runx2 function, resulting in a reduction of osteoblasts in the bone marrow. C/EBPs CCAAT/enhancer binding proteins, Osx osterix, Runx2 runt-related transcription factor 2
(Adapted from Kawai et al. [43])
Fig. 3Canonical Wnt signaling and bone remodeling. T2DM patients present a greater amount of sclerostin, which blocks the Wnt pathway and inhibits osteoblastogenesis. Lrp lipoprotein receptor-related protein
(Adapted from Canalis et al. [59])
Summary of the mechanisms by which T2DM negatively affects the bone
| Mechanisms | Effects on bone | |
|---|---|---|
| AGEs | Osteoclastogenesis and osteoblast dysfunction [ | Low bone quality [ |
| Insulin and IGF-1 | Increases osteoblast proliferation and promotes collagen synthesis [ | Negative correlation with hip and vertebral fracture [ |
| PPARγ | Differentiate MSC into adipocytes [ | Suppression of osteoblastogenesis [ |
| Enteric hormones (incretins) | Energy intake releases GIP and GLP-2 [ | Low incretin levels decrease bone formation and augment resorption [ |
| Osteocalcin | Low levels in T2DM [ | Low levels decrease bone formation [ |
| Wnt/B-catenin pathway: sclerostin | High levels in T2DM [ | High sclerostin levels increase bone resorption [ |
| Vitamin D3 | Low levels in T2DM [ | Reduction of osteocalcin synthesis [ |
The indirect and direct effects of compromised glucose/insulin metabolism on bone induces a decreased bone turnover, a reduced bone quality and an augmented risk of fractures
AGEs advanced glycation end-products, IGF-1 insulin-like growth factor-1, PPARγ peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, MSC mesenchymal stem-cells, GIP glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide, GLP-2 glucagon-like peptide-2, T2DM type 2 diabetes mellitus, 1,25(OH) D3 1,25 dihydroxy vitamin D