Publication | Closed Access
Dynamics of insulin sensitivity, β-cell function, and β-cell mass during the development of diabetes in <i>fa</i>/<i>fa</i> rats
56
Citations
25
References
2007
Year
Glucose ModelCellular PhysiologyInsulin SignalingObesityMetabolic SyndromeBody Compositionβ-Cell MassMale ZdfMetabolic SignalingMetabolic StateHealth SciencesEndocrinologyCell BiologyBiologyβ-Cell FunctionInsulin SensitivityDevelopmental BiologyDiabetesPhysiologyMetabolic RegulationMale Zucker FattyDiabetes MellitusMetabolismMedicine
Both male Zucker Fatty (mZF) and lower-fat-fed female Zucker diabetic fatty (LF-fZDF) rats are obese but remain normoglycemic. Male ZDF (mZDF) and high-fat-fed female ZDF rats (HF-fZDF) are also obese but develop diabetes between 7 and 10 wk of age. Although these models have been well studied, the mechanisms governing the adaptations to obesity in the normoglycemic animals, and the failure of adaptation in the animals that develop diabetes, remain unclear. Here we use quantitative morphometry and our recently developed coupled beta-cell mass (beta(m)), insulin, and glucose model to elucidate the dynamics of insulin sensitivity (S(I)), beta-cell secretory capacity (beta(sc)), and beta(m) in these four animal models. Both groups that remained normoglycemic with increasing obesity (mZF, LF-fZDF) exhibited increased beta(m) and constant beta(sc) in response to a falling S(I). In rats that developed hyperglycemia (mZDF, HF-fZDF), there was a greater reduction in S(I) and slower expansion of beta(m), with constant beta(sc). beta(sc) decreased after glucose levels rose above 20 mM. Taken together, these data suggest that excessive insulin resistance and insufficient beta(m) adaptation play a primary role in the pathogenesis of diabetes.
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