| Literature DB >> 35806437 |
Mara Suleiman1, Lorella Marselli1, Miriam Cnop2,3, Decio L Eizirik2, Carmela De Luca1, Francesca R Femia4, Marta Tesi1, Silvia Del Guerra1, Piero Marchetti1,4.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) has been considered a relentlessly worsening disease, due to the progressive deterioration of the pancreatic beta cell functional mass. Recent evidence indicates, however, that remission of T2D may occur in variable proportions of patients after specific treatments that are associated with recovery of beta cell function. Here we review the available information on the recovery of beta cells in (a) non-diabetic individuals previously exposed to metabolic stress; (b) T2D patients following low-calorie diets, pharmacological therapies or bariatric surgery; (c) human islets isolated from non-diabetic organ donors that recover from "lipo-glucotoxic" conditions; and (d) human islets isolated from T2D organ donors and exposed to specific treatments. The improvement of insulin secretion reported by these studies and the associated molecular traits unveil the possibility to promote T2D remission by directly targeting pancreatic beta cells.Entities:
Keywords: bariatric surgery; glucotoxicity; insulin secretion; lipotoxicity; low-calorie diets; pancreatic beta cells; pancreatic islets; remission; transcriptome; type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35806437 PMCID: PMC9267061 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23137435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Simplified trajectory of beta cell damage in type 2 diabetes. Obesity and the associated insulin resistance lead to beta cell overwork and the resulting hyperinsulinemia maintains blood glucose levels within the normal range. In case of genetic predisposition, metabolic stress, inflammation and other factors cause alterations in key beta cell organelles, which contributes to beta cell dysfunction and/or death. ER, endoplasmic reticulum.
Type 2 diabetes remission: definition and recommendations (adapted from [13,14]).
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The term used to describe a sustained metabolic improvement in type 2 diabetes to nearly normal levels should be |
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Remission should be defined as a return of HbA1c to <6.5% (<48 mmol/mol) that occurs spontaneously or following an intervention, and that persists for at least 3 months in the absence of usual glucose-lowering pharmacotherapy. |
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When HbA1c is determined to be an unreliable marker of chronic glycemic control, FPG < 126 mg/dl (<7.0 mmol/L) or estimated A1c < 6.5% calculated from continuous glucose monitoring can be used as alternative criteria. |
Studies showing in vivo recovery of beta cell function.
| Ref. | Number of Participants | Experimental Design | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 12 healthy subjects | 24 h Intralipid infusion; | Improved acute insulin release at the IVGTT 24 h after the end |
| [ | 9 healthy subjects genetically predisposed to T2D | Reduction of plasma NEFA by acipimox; | Improved first- and second-phase insulin release after reduction of NEFA |
| [ | 11 T2D subjects | Low calorie diet; | Improved first-phase insulin release |
| [ | 382 newly diagnosed T2D patients | Intensive therapy with insulin or oral hypoglycaemic agents | Improved beta cell function after intensive intervention, with more sustained results in the insulin group; |
| [ | 12 morbidly obese T2D subjects | Bariatric surgery (distal Roux-en-Y reconstruction); | Improved insulin secretion |
| [ | 13 morbidly obese non-diabetic women | Bariatric surgery (distal Roux-en-Y reconstruction); | Improved beta cell function |
| [ | 10 obese T2D subjects | Bariatric surgery (distal Roux-en-Y reconstruction); | Improved first-phase insulin secretion |
T2D, type 2 diabetes; IVGTT, intravenous glucose tolerance test; NEFA, non-esterified fatty acids.
Studies showing ex vivo recovery of beta cell function.
| Ref. | Number of Samples | Experimental Design | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 26 islet preparations from non-diabetic subjects | 2-day incubation with lipo-glucotoxic stressors followed by 4 days of washout; | Recovery of |
| [ | 7 islet preparations from non-diabetic subjects | 48 h incubation at 5.5 or 16.7 mmol/L glucose followed by 48 h washout; | Recovery of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion after washout |
| [ | 4 islet preparations from non-diabetic subjects | 2 preparations incubated at 5.5 mmol/L glucose and 2 at 33 mmol/L glucose for 4–9 days; 1 preparation of the latter incubated for 6 days at 33 mmol/L glucose and then for 3 days in normal glucose; | Recovery of insulin mRNA expression and insulin secretion after washout |
| [ | 6 islet preparations from T2D donors | 24 h incubation with metformin; | Improved glucose-stimulated insulin release; |
| [ | 18 islet preparations (11 non-diabetic and 7 T2D donors) | Exposure to exendin-4 for 48 h; | Improved glucose-stimulated insulin release; |
| [ | 26 islet preparations (17 non-diabetic and 9 T2D donors) | Exposure to autophagy inducers (rapamycin) or blockers (3-methyladenince, concanamycin-A) for 2–5 days, in the presence or not of palmitate or brefeldin A; | Rapamycin-exposed diabetic islets showed improved insulin secretion, reduced apoptosis and better ultrastructure |
T2D, type 2 diabetes.