| Literature DB >> 29966260 |
Xuzhu Lin1, Tara C Brennan-Speranza2, Itamar Levinger3,4, Bu B Yeap5,6.
Abstract
Recent advances have indicated that osteocalcin, and in particular its undercarboxylated form (ucOC), is not only a nutritional biomarker reflective of vitamin K status and an indicator of bone health but also an active hormone that mediates glucose metabolism in experimental studies. This work has been supported by the putative identification of G protein-coupled receptor, class C, group 6, member A (GPRC6A) as a cell surface receptor for ucOC. Of note, ucOC has been associated with diabetes and with cardiovascular risk in epidemiological studies, consistent with a pathophysiological role for ucOC in vivo. Limitations of existing knowledge include uncertainty regarding the underlying mechanisms by which ucOC interacts with GPRC6A to modulate metabolic and cardiovascular outcomes, technical issues with commonly used assays for ucOC in serum, and a paucity of clinical trials to prove causation and illuminate the scope for novel health interventions. A key emerging area of research is the role of ucOC in relation to expression of GPRC6A in muscle, and whether exercise interventions may modulate metabolic outcomes favorably in part via ucOC. Further research is warranted to clarify potential direct and indirect roles for ucOC in human health and cardiometabolic diseases.Entities:
Keywords: GPRC6A; bone; cardiovascular disease; diabetes; insulin resistance; muscle; osteocalcin; undercarboxylated osteocalcin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29966260 PMCID: PMC6073619 DOI: 10.3390/nu10070847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Selected studies examining associations of total circulating osteocalcin (TOC) with insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome and diabetes in men and women are summarised. X = cross-sectional analysis, L = longitudinal analysis, I = interventional component, HOMA = homeostasis model assessment, HOMA-B = β-cell activity, HOMA-IR = insulin resistance.
| First Author, Year [ref no.] | Study (Type) | Results |
|---|---|---|
| Im J-A, 2008 [ | 339 post-menopausal women, 31 with Type 2 diabetes (X) | Serum TOC was lower in women with Type 2 diabetes vs. controls (17.5 vs. 22.2 μg/L), and correlated inversely with HbA1c ( |
| Zhou M, 2009 [ | 254 men (128 newly diagnosed Type 2 diabetes) and 180 postmenopausal women (92 with diabetes) (X) | Serum TOC was lower in adults with Type 2 diabetes vs. controls (15.1 vs. 16.8 μg/L). |
| Kindblom JM, 2009 [ | 857 non-diabetic and 153 diabetic men (X) | Diabetic men had lower TOC (21.7 vs. 27.8 μg/L), TOC was inversely related to body mass index (BMI), fat mass and fasting glucose. |
| Kanazawa I, 2009 [ | 179 men and 149 post-menopausal women with Type 2 diabetes (X) | TOC correlated negatively with fasting plasma glucose ( |
| Fernandez-Real JM, 2009 [ | 149 non-diabetic men (X), and 46 non-diabetic men and women (I) | Serum TOC correlated with insulin sensitivity ( |
| Pittas AG, 2009 [ | 380 men and women (X), 198 (L), 5% with diabetes | Serum TOC inversely correlated with fasting glucose, insulin and IR. Higher TOC associated with lower rise in fasting glucose over 3 years. |
| Saleem U, 2010 [ | 2493 men and women (X) | Serum TOC inversely correlated with BMI, fasting glucose, IR and leptin, positively correlated with adiponectin. TOC in highest quartile associated with reduced odds of metabolic syndrome. |
| Yeap BB, 2010 [ | 2765 older men with metabolic syndrome present in 797 (28.8%) (X) | TOC level was inversely associated with waist circumference, glucose, triglyceride levels and IR, and was lower in men with metabolic syndrome (20.1 vs. 21.4 μg/L). Men with TOC of 13.3–16.6 and <13.3 μg/L had 1.5 to 2-fold increased risk of metabolic syndrome compared to men with TOC ≥ 30 μg/L. |
| Tan A, 2011 [ | 2344 men aged 20–69 years (X) | TOC correlated with HDL and was inversely associated with BP, glucose, triglycerides, waist circumference and BMI. Men with TOC in the lowest quartile had a higher odds ratio for having metabolic syndrome. |
| Bao Y, 2011 [ | 181 men who underwent coronary angiography (X) | TOC was lower in men with metabolic syndrome. In a subgroup of 60 men with normal glucose tolerance men with multi-vessel coronary artery disease had lower TOC compare to men without coronary artery disease. |
| Bae SJ, 2011 [ | 567 men and postmenopausal women (X) | TOC was lower in postmenopausal women with metabolic syndrome (18.9 vs. 22.5 ug/L) and in men with metabolic syndrome (14.6 vs. 16.1 ug/L) compared to those without metabolic syndrome. |
| Lee SW, 2012 [ | 214 postmenopausal women (X) | TOC was not associated with fasting glucose, but was inversely associated with HOMA-IR |
| Movahed A, 2012 [ | 382 postmenopausal women (X) | Lower TOC was associated with higher odds ratio of having Type 2 diabetes |
| Hwang Y-C, 2012 [ | 1229 men aged 25–60 years without diabetes at baseline, of which 90 developed Type 2 diabetes during mean follow-up of 8.4 years (L) | Baseline TOC in tertiles was inversely associated with HOMA-IR in cross-sectional analysis, but was not associated with incident Type 2 diabetes in longitudinal analysis. |
| Oosterwerff MM, 2013 [ | 1284 persons (629 men and 655 women) aged 65–88 years (X) | TOC was inversely associated with metabolic syndrome with odds ratio 3.7 for those with TOC in the lowest compared to the highest quartile of values. |
| Yang R, 2013 [ | 1789 postmenopausal women aged 41–78 years (X) | TOC was lower in women with metabolic syndrome (18.5 vs. 21.1 ug/L) compared to those without. Women with higher TOC had lower odds ratio for metabolic syndrome. |
| Confavreux CB, 2014 [ | 798 men aged 51–85 years (X) | Higher TOC was associated with lower odds ratio for metabolic syndrome. |
| Kang J-H, 2016 [ | 98 persons (24 men and 74 women) mean age 53.5 years (X) | TOC was inversely associated with fasting glucose and HOMA-IR, but not with atherosclerotic plaque in the subset of 31 persons who had coronary CT angiography. |
Selected studies examining associations of undercarboxylated osteocalcin (ucOC) with insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome and diabetes in men and women are summarised. X = cross-sectional analysis, L = longitudinal analysis, I = interventional component, HOMA = homeostasis model assessment, HOMA-B = β-cell activity, HOMA-IR = insulin resistance, TOC = total osteocalcin, P1NP = N-terminal propeptide of type I collagen, CTX = collagen type I C-terminal cross-linked telopeptide. * ucOC assayed using hydroxyapatite binding, # ucOC assayed using ucOC antibody.
| First Author, Year [ref no.] | Study (Type) | ucOC Assay | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hwang Y-C, 2009 [ | 199 men (X) | # | Higher ucOC associated with greater insulin sensitivity (HOMA-B). |
| Shea MK, et al., 2009 [ | 348 non-diabetic men and women (M = 142, F = 206) (X, L) | * | Higher total and carboxylated OC levels (not ucOC) associated with insulin sensitivity, association attenuated by adjustment for adiponectin. Higher carboxylated OC level at baseline predicted less change in IR at 3 years, lower % ucOC predicted greater increase in IR. |
| Kanazawa I, 2009 [ | 50 men and women with poorly controlled Type 2 diabetes (L) | # | After one month of improved glycemic control, TOC level increased, ucOC was unchanged but the ratio of ucOC/TOC decreased. |
| Kanazawa I, 2011 [ | 180 men and 109 postmenopausal women with Type 2 diabetes (X) | # | ucOC was inversely correlated with fasting glucose and HbA1c in men, but not in postmenopausal women. |
| Levinger I, 2011 [ | 28 men aged 52.4 years with BMI 32.1 kg/m2 (X, I) | # | ucOC inversely correlated with fasting glucose and HbA1c, ucOC increased following aerobic and strength exercise. |
| Bullo M, 2012 [ | 79 men aged 55–80 years with cardiovascular risk factors (X, L) | # | Baseline ucOC was not associated with HOMA-IR at 2 years, change in ucOC was inversely associated with change in HOMA-IR over 2 years. |
| Iki M, 2012 [ | 1597 men aged ≥65 years (X) | # | TOC and ucOC were correlated (correlation coefficient 0.66). TOC and ucOC in quintiles were inversely associated with fasting glucose, HbA1c and HOMA-IR. Inverse association of ucOC with these outcomes remains significant after adjusting for TOC (but not vice versa). Higher quintiles of ucOC were associated with lower odds ratios for prevalent Type 2 diabetes (but not TOC). |
| Mori K, 2012 [ | 129 adults with Type 2 diabetes mean age 54.9 years (X) | # | ucOC was not associated with insulin resistance using euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp in adults with Type 2 diabetes |
| Thrailkill KM, 2012 [ | 115 adults with Type 1 diabetes and 55 controls mean age 18.8 years | # | No difference in ucOC between adults with Type 1 diabetes and controls. ucOC was inversely associated with HbA1c. |
| Diaz-Lopez A, 2013 [ | 153 adults with newly diagnosed Type 2 diabetes and 306 matched controls, mean age 66.3 years | # | Carboxylated osteocalcin (not ucOC) was inversely associated with HOMA-IR in cases, and fasting glucose in controls. Lower carboxylated osteocalcin or ucOC in tertiles were associated with higher odds ratio for incident diabetes. |
| Gower BA, 2013 [ | 63 overweight/obese adults with normal ( | * | TOC was associated with insulin sensitivity in the whole cohort. ucOC was associated with indices of β cell response in the subset with impaired fasting glucose. |
| Levinger I, 2014 [ | 11 men aged 58.1 years with BMI 33.1 kg/m2 (I) | * | Exercise increased ucOC and ucOC/TOC ratio, reduced glucose concentrations and improved insulin sensitivity. |
| Saucedo R, 2015 [ | 60 women with gestational diabetes and 60 with normal glucose tolerance (X) | # | No difference in TOC or ucOC in women with gestational diabetes compared to women with normal glucose tolerance. |
| Yeap BB, 2015 [ | 2966 men aged ≥70 years (X) | * | Higher ucOC was associated with reduced diabetes risk (odds ratio per 1 SD increase after adjusting for conventional risk factors = 0.55). Similar results were seen for TOC, P1NP and CTX. When all 4 markers were included in the fully adjusted model, higher ucOC remained associated with reduced diabetes risk (odds ratio 0.56) while TOC was no longer associated. |
| Bonneau J, 2017 [ | 129 overweight/obese postmenopausal women without diabetes mean age 57.7 years (X) | # | Ratio of carboxylated to total osteocalcin correlated inversely with insulin sensitivity assessed using euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp and positively with HOMA-IR in postmenopausal women. |
| Takashi Y, 2017 [ | 50 adults with Type 2 diabetes mean age 59.2 years (X) | # | ucOC correlated with change in |
| Yeap BB, 2017 [ | 108 adults with Type 1 diabetes mean age 39.1 years (X) | * | ucOC was not associated with fasting glucose, HbA1c or daily insulin dose in adults with Type 1 diabetes. |
Selected studies examining associations of total osteocalcin (TOC) and undercarboxylated osteocalcin (ucOC) with outcomes related to cardiovascular disease and mortality. X = cross-sectional study, L = longitudinal study, CHD = coronary heart disease. * ucOC assayed using hydroxyapatite binding, # ucOC assayed using ucOC antibody, N/A = no ucOC results reported.
| First Author, Year [ref no.] | Study (Type) | ucOC Assay | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Szulc P, 2009 [ | 781 men aged ≥50 years (L) | N/A | TOC was not associated with mortality, while higher bone resorption markers were associated. |
| Yeap BB, 2010 [ | 3542 men aged 70–89 years followed for 5.2 years (L) | N/A | U-shaped association of TOC with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. |
| Zhang Y, 2010 [ | 461 adults (243 with CHD and 218 without) undergoing coronary angiography (X) | N/A | TOC was lower in group with CHD. |
| Confavreux CB, 2013 [ | 774 men aged 51–85 years followed for 10 years (L) | N/A | Higher baseline TOC was associated with less progression of abdominal aortic calcification and lower all-cause mortality. |
| Lerchbaum E, 2013 [ | 2271 men referred for coronary angiography (L) | N/A | Association of TOC in lowest quintile with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. |
| Lerchbaum E, 2014 [ | 986 women aged 58–72 years (L) | N/A | U-shaped association of TOC with non-cardiovascular mortality, TOC was not associated with all-cause or cardiovascular mortality. |
| Choi S-H, 2015 [ | 162 adults (114 men and 48 women) (X) | # | Higher ucOC and ratio of ucOC/TOC found in men with coronary artery calcification (no differences found in women). |
| Yeap BB, 2015 [ | 3384 men aged 70–89 years followed for 7 years (L) | * | Higher ratio of ucOC/TOC was associated with lower incidence of myocardial infarction, but was not associated with stroke. |