Diabetes Susceptibility Gene Found
Reported October 11, 2011
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- There are some genes we wish would not fit. Ten years of
mouse breeding, screening, and record-keeping have finally paid off for Alan
Attie and his lab members. A recent study has pinpointed a gene that gives
diabetes susceptibility in obese mice.
They also showed that the protein coded by the gene, called tomosyn-2, acts as a
brake on insulin secretion from the pancreas.
"It's too early for us to know how relevant this gene will be to human
diabetes," Attie, a UW–Madison biochemistry professor was quoted saying, "but
the concept of negative regulation is one of the most interesting things to come
out of this study and that very likely applies to humans."
In a properly tuned system, insulin secreted into the blood after eating helps
maintain blood sugar at a safe level. Too little insulin or insulin resistance
leads to high blood sugar and diabetic symptoms. Too much insulin can drive
blood glucose dangerously low and lead to coma or even death in a matter of
minutes.
"You can imagine that if you're in a fasted state, you don't want to increase
your insulin, so it's very important to have a brake on insulin secretion,"
Angie Oler, one of the lead authors, was quoted as saying. "It needs to be
stopped when you're not eating and it needs to start again when you do eat."
The group worked in on tomosyn-2 while searching for genes that contribute to
diabetes susceptibility in obese animals.
The group studied obese mice, explaining that, "It takes more insulin to achieve
the same glucose-lowering effect in an obese person than it does in a lean
person. If you can produce that extra insulin – and most people do – you'll be
okay. You will avoid diabetes at the expense of having to produce and maintain a
higher insulin level," Attie was quoted as saying. "Most of the type 2 diabetes
that occurs in humans today would not exist were it not for the obesity
epidemic."
However, an insufficient insulin response leads to diabetes, and the same is
true in mice.
Thorough genetic analyses and comparisons of obese diabetes-resistant and
diabetes-susceptible mouse strains ultimately revealed a single amino acid
difference that destabilizes the tomosyn-2 protein in the diabetes-resistant
mice, effectively releasing the brake on insulin secretion and allowing those
animals to release enough insulin to avoid diabetes.
The researchers also confirmed that the human form of tomosyn-2 inhibits insulin
secretion from human pancreatic beta cells.
Though diabetes is highly unlikely to be caused by a single gene, identifying
important biological pathways can suggest clinically useful targets. "This study
shows the power of genetics to discover new mechanisms for a complex disease
like type 2 diabetes," postdoctoral fellow Sushant Bhatnagar, a co-lead author
of the paper, was quoted as saying.
"Now we know there are proteins that are negative regulators of insulin
secretion. Very likely they do the same thing in human beta cells, and it
motivates us to move forward to try to figure out the mechanisms behind that
negative regulation," Attie was quoted as saying.
SOURCE: (PLoS Genetics, published online October 6, 2011)
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