Metabolic Changes in Diabetes: R. D. G. Leslie London
Metabolic Changes in Diabetes: R. D. G. Leslie London
Metabolic Changes in Diabetes: R. D. G. Leslie London
R. D. G. LESLIE
London
venous whole blood glucose must be over 10 mmol/l in ance not beta cell dysfunction. However, it is widely
samples taken at random or 2 hours after a 75 g oral glu believed that neither abnormal insulin secretion nor
cose load. In IDDM hyperglycaemia results from abnormal sensitivity to insulin alone can explain the glu
decreased insulin secretion due to beta cell destruction. In cose intolerance of NIDDM.
NIDDM a decrease in both insulin secretion and insulin
sensitivity may operate to cause hyperglycaemia and the Aetiology
relative contribution of each defect can vary from individ The most powerful evidence that NIDDM is predom
ual to individual. inantly inherited comes from the study of identical twins:
more identical than non-identical twins of diabetic
NON-INSULIN-DEPENDENT DIABETES patients are concordant for NIDDM (see Table 1).9,/0
Non-insulin-dependent diabetes affects at least 2% of the Recent evidence suggests that some individuals with
population and no race is immune from the disease; maturity onset diabetes in the young (MODY) have a
among the Pima Indians of Arizona and Nauruans from defect (both missense and nonsense mutations have been
Polynesia, half the adult population is diabetic. The preva reported) in their glucokinase gene promoter region which
lence of NIDDM increases with increasing age: in the might account for up to 40% of these cases. Rare genetic
elderly the prevalence can be striking, reaching 45% in defects in the insulin gene and in the insulin receptor have
I ,
men aged 75-79 years in east Finland. In part this increase also been described which may cause diabetes. 1 1 2
may be due to an age-related deterioration in glucose The estimated heritability of NIDDM is about 82%
tolerance. Thus, while fasting blood glucose levels remain (Table I). In assessing the role of the environment in caus
fairly constant with age the glucose level 2 hours after oral ing NIDDM it is important to understand that heritability
glucose rises steadily. In the absence of prospective stud is not an invariant index of a genetic influence. It describes
ies this age-related effect is ignored for the purposes of the genetic effect under particular environmental condi
defining the disease. tions. Different estimates of heritability might be obtained
if twins were studied in different environments. A number
Pathogenesis of non-genetic factors have been implicated in the aetiol
The islets of Langerhans in patients with NIDDM appear ogy of this disease, including nutrition, obesity, ageing
normal except for amyloid deposits and a reduction in the and reduced exercise.
beta cell mass to about 60% of normal. In general, the Nutrition, The incidence of NIDDM decreases during
secreted insulin has a normal structure though there is a food shortage. However, high carbohydrate diets improve
tendency to secrete a relative excess of proinsulin. The insulin sensitivity in both normal and NIDDM subjects
disease is characterised by a decreased beta cell secretory through physiological adaptation to an altered fuel supply
capacity, insulin resistance and hepatic glucose overpro and not reversal of a pathological process. The change
duction.4-6 The onset of the diabetes is insidious, probably from hunter-gatherer to a modern diet may be responsible,
occurring several years before the clinical diagnosis. in part, for the virtual epidemic of diabetes in migrant
Since hyperglycaemia itself can induce beta cell dys populations and previously isolated communities. At
function and insulin insensitivity it has proved impossible present, however, there is no direct evidence that dietary
to distinguish primary changes leading to diabetes from factors cause NIDDM although they may influence rate of
those which are secondary to the disease. progression to clinical symptoms. Recent studies do indi
To address this problem, studies have been performed cate a relationship between low birth weight and impaired
on non-diabetic children of diabetic patients. These chil glucose tolerance in later life; 1 3 if confirmed, this associ
dren show fasting hyperglycaemia, impaired glucose ation could be due to poor nutrition in utero limiting pan
tolerance, decreased glucose clearance, fasting hyperin creatic development.
sulinaemia, either decreased or increased insulin Obesity, Obesity is not a major factor but can potentiate
responses to glucose, and impaired insulin-mediated glu NIDDM in genetically susceptible individuals. Offspring
cose disposal due to reduced non-oxidative glucose of NIDDM patients who subsequently develop NIDDM
metabolism. It remains to be determined whether these themselves are more likely to be obese when young. In one
changes presage diabetes. The one study which followed study, those subjects with low birth weight who became
patients prospectively found that offspring who developed obese were particularly prone to diabetes.1 3 Individuals
diabetes, as compared with those who did not, were with upper body obesity are also at particularly high risk
initially more obese and had decreased glucose tolerance
Table I. Proband concordance of non-insulin-dependent diabetes
and glucose clearance, fasting hyperinsulinaemia and mellitus after first and second oral glucose tolerance tests
increased second phase insulin responses.7 The develop
ment of NIDDM was both preceded and predicted by First test' Second testb
(%) (%)
defects in insulin-dependent and insulin-independent glu
cose uptake, changes which could precede the onset of Identical twins 29 58
hyperglycaemia and diabetes by more than a decade.8 Non-identical twins 14 17
These observations are consistent with the finding that the " First test: subjects aged 42-55 years,
initial lesion in NIDDM is due to peripheral insulin resist- h Second test: subjects aged 52-65 years,
METABOLIC CHANGES IN DIABETES 207
of NIOOM. Nevertheless, there are no differences in the been called the New World Syndrome, the Matabolic Syn
relative contributions of decreased insulin secretion and drome or Syndrome X.
decreased insulin sensitivity between obese and lean The cause of microvascular disease is not clearly
NIDOM subjects. defined but the belief is that hyperglycaemia is a major
Ageing and Exercise. Ageing is not associated with factor and, probably the major factor. Microvascular com
decreased insulin secretion nor with decreased insulin plications are not simply genetically determined since the
sensitivity in physically active subjects. However, lack of non-diabetic identical twins of diabetic patients do not get
exercise in the elderly may hasten the appearance of them. For complications to develop hyperglycaemia must
hyperglycaemia. Recent prospective studies of popula be present. The cause of the hyperglycaemia, i.e. the cause
tions at risk of diabetes suggest that physical activity pro of the diabetes, is irrelevant since microvascular compli
tects against the development of NIOOM. cations are a feature of all types of diabetes. As diabetes is
defined by hyperglycaemia it reasonable to anticipate that
INSULIN-DEPENDENT DIABETES these microvascular complications should result from this
There is worldwide variability in the average annual inci hyperglycaemia. It is clear that the risk of diabetic compli
dence oflOOM under the age of 15 years ranging from 1.7 cations is related to the duration of the disease.14 A number
per 100 000 person-years in Japan to 29.5 per 100 000 of studies have demonstrated a relationship between the
person-years in Finland. Incidence rates in Western indus level of blood glucose and the risk of developing compli
trialised countries establish 100M as the second com cations. Thus, in one study an average blood glucose more
monest chronic childhood illness after asthma. than 50% above the normal range was associated with a
40% risk of developing severe retinopathy at 14 years: in
Pathogenesis contrast, this risk was only 5% in those patients with blood
Insulin-dependent diabetes is due to destruction of the glucose levels close to the normal range.14
beta cells in the islets of Langerhans. The disease is caused
by environmental factors operating in a genetically sus Pregnancy
ceptible host in early childhood to initiate the destruction It is known that hyperglycaemia can influence fetal
of the insulin secreting cells, probably by an immune pro development. IS The incidence of major and minor congen
cess.9 In some genetically susceptible individuals this ital anomalies in children of patients with diabetes is
immune process can persist in association with chronic between 6% and 9%, that is up to 3 times greater than in
progressive beta cell destruction over many months, even the general population. The most prevalent congenital
years, and lead to 100M, but in others it may remit sponta anomalies in children of diabetic patients include caudal
neously without diabetes developing.9 regression syndrome, neural tube defects and cardiac
At diagnosis about 80% of islets contain no beta cells anomalies. The excess in malformations is confined to
and the islets may be heavily infiltrated with lymphocytes. patients whose diabetes antedates their pregnancy. In
There is no evidence that the exocrine pancreatic cells or addition, the malformations arise from developmental
the other islet cells are involved in this destructive process. changes likely to have occurred before the seventh week
The limited secretion of insulin by patients with 100M of gestation. It was proposed that the excess congenital
results in them being prone to increased ketoneogenesis. anomalies in children of patients with diabetes was due to
In the absence of insulin treatment such patients will die in hyperglycaemia in early fetal life. This hypothesis was
diabetic ketoacidosis. tested by measuring glycated haemoglobin, an index of
blood glucose levels, over the previous 2 months. Children
METABOLIC CONSEQUENCIES OF of patients with high glycated haemoglobin levels had a
HYPERGLYCAEMIA striking excess of congenital anomalies which reached
A common health aim is to reduce the morbidity and mor 22% if the glycated haemoglobin was greater than 10%.
tality associated with diabetes. Risk factors for macrovas The risk of major malformations can be reduced to non
cular disease are well established in the non-diabetic diabetic levels if the diabetic mother is treated to obtain
population and include hypercholesterolaemia, increased normal glycated haemoglobin levels before conception. IS
plasma fibrinogen, smoking, obesity and hypertension. The mechanism of this embryopathy is not clear. Pre
The evidence is that in the diabetic population the same pregnancy counselling is now routine in diabetic clinics
risk factors operate but, if anything, diabetes has an addi and patients are advised to obtain near-normal blood glu
tive effect with them. In addition, in NIOOM there is a cose levels before conception.
tendency for some of these risk factors to aggregate; these
patients are particularly at risk of obesity, dyslipidaemia Mechanisms
and hypertension. A common feature of these changes is Exposure to hyperglycaemia can cause acute reversible
their association with insensitivity to insulin, an obser metabolic changes and, if prolonged, cumulative irrevers
vation which has led to the proposal that insulin resistance ible changes. Three broad mechanisms have been
is the single unifying factor causing an excess risk of described for glucose-induced damage.16 First, glucose
macrovascular disease in Western society.3 The associ and other sugars can bond with any exposed lysine resi
ation of major risk factors for macrovascular disease has dues or (in the case of haemoglobin) valine, or any protein.
208 R. D. G. LESLIE
This process of glycation can alter the structure and func 3. Howell SL, Bird G St J. Biosynthesis and secretion of
insulin. Br Med Bull 1989;45:19-36.
tion of the protein. Further changes can lead to glycation
4. Houslay MD, Siddle K. Molecular basis of insulin receptor
products with extensive cross-linkage called advanced function. Br Med Bull 1989;45:264-84.
glycation end products - an irreversible change. These 5. DeFronzo RA. Pathogenesis of type 2 (non-insulin depend
molecules may lead to the production of free oxygen rad ent) diabetes mellitus: a balanced overview. Diabetologia
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6. Temple RC, Carrington CA, Luzio SD et al. Insulin defi
second mechanism is the production of excess sorbitol
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though a normally redundant pathway involving the
293-5.
enzyme aldose reductase. Sorbitol cannot readily leave a 7. Warram JH, Martin BC, Krolewski AS, Soeldner JS, Kahn
cell and accumulation of the alcohol sugar could lead to CR. Slow glucose removal rate and hyperinsulinemia pre
osmotically driven overhydration of the tissue and dam cede the development of type II diabetes in the offspring of
age. The third mechanism involves the direct competition diabetic parents. Ann Intern Med 1990;113:909-15.
8. Martin BC, Warram lH, Krolewski AS, Bergman RN,
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Soeldner JS, Kahn CR. Role of glucose and insulin resist
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Friedman GD. Concordance for type 2 (non-insulin depend
CONCLUSION
ent) diabetes mellitus in male twins. Diabetologia 1978;30:
These observations suggest that hyperglycaemia, but also 763-8.
the level of other major risk factors, plays an important II. Haneda M, Polansky KS, Berganstal RM, et al. Familial
role in producing the complications of diabetes. The days hyperinsulinaemia due to a structurally abnormal insulin:
definition of an emerging new clinical syndrome. N Engl J
of regarding diabetes as simply a sugar problem are gone.
Med 1984;310:1288-94.
In the absence of a successful primary prevention policy 12. Taylor SI, Cama A, Accili D, et al. Molecular genetics of
for diabetes we seek to reverse the level of these risk fac insulin resistant diabetes mellitus. J Clin Endocrinol Metab
tors towards normal. 1991;73:1158-63.
13. Hales CN, Barker DJP. Type 2 (non-insulin dependent)
Key words: Diabetes, Glucose, Glycation, Insulin.
diabetes mellitus: the thrifty phenotype hypothesis . Diabe
tologia 1992;35:595-601.
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