Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (type 2 diabetes)
57,723 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Insulin resistance is a common metabolic disorder. It plays an important role in the metabolic syndrome (or syndrome X), type 2 diabetes, obesity and in the lipodystrophic syndromes recently described, associated with treatments of HIV disease and represent a worrying cardiovascular risk. However, its pathophysiology remains poorly understood in these situations. Syndromes of major insulin resistance, although rare, allow investigations of the mechanisms leading to alterations in the insulin transduction pathways. Mutations of the insulin receptor gene have been discovered in rare patients. Therefore alterations at the post-receptor level are probably causative in other cases. Furthermore, the role of body fat repartition seems determinant in the apparition of insulin resistance, as attested by the clinical characteristics of lipodystrophies, either congenital or acquired. The two lipodystrophic syndromes which molecular defect is identified are the familial partial lipodystrophy of the Dunnigan type, due to mutations of the lamin A/C gene, and the congenital generalized lipodystrophy, linked to alterations in the protein seipin. However, their physiopathology remains mysterious. Lamin A/C is indeed an ubiquitous nuclear protein, which is also mutated in a genetic squelettic and/or cardiac myopathy, and seipin is a protein of unknown function mainly expressed in brain. Progresses in the understanding of these syndromes, in particular lipodystrophies which can be considered as caricatural models of the metabolic syndrome, will probably allow to clarify the physiopathology of the more common forms of insulin resistance.
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PMID:[Major insulin resistance syndromes: clinical and physiopathological aspects]. 1183 62

Insulin resistance is common and plays a central role in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Precedents in biomedical research indicate that evaluation of monogenic syndromes can help to understand a common complex phenotype. Monogenic forms of insulin resistance, such as familial partial lipodystrophy, which results from mutations in either LMNA (encoding lamin A/C) or PPARG (encoding peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma), and congenital generalized lipodystrophy, which results from mutations in either AGPAT2 (encoding 1-acylglycerol-3-phosphate O-acyltransferase) or BSCL2 (encoding seipin), can display features seen in the common metabolic syndrome. In addition, insulin resistance is seen in disorders associated with insulin receptor mutations, progeria syndromes and in inherited forms of obesity. Although insulin resistance in such rare monogenic syndromes could simply be secondary to fat redistribution and/or central obesity, the products of the causative genes might also produce insulin resistance directly, and might illuminate new causative mechanisms for insulin resistance in such common disorders as T2DM and obesity.
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PMID:Monogenic forms of insulin resistance: apertures that expose the common metabolic syndrome. 1451 35

Lack of adipose tissue, either complete or partial, is the hallmark of disorders known as lipodystrophies. Patients with lipodystrophies suffer from metabolic complications similar to those associated with obesity, including insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, hypertriglyceridemia, and hepatic steatosis. The loss of body fat in inherited lipodystrophies can be caused by defects in the development and/or differentiation of adipose tissue as a consequence of mutations in a number of genes, including PPARG (encoding a nuclear hormone receptor), AGPAT2 (encoding an enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of triglyceride and phospholipids), AKT2 (encoding a protein involved in insulin signal transduction), and BSCL2 (encoding seipin, whose role in the adipocyte biology remains unclear). The loss of body fat can also be caused by the premature death of adipocytes due to mutations in lamin A/C, nuclear lamina proteins, and ZMPSTE24, which modifies the prelamin A post-translationally. In this review, we focus on the molecular basis of inherited lipodystrophies as they relate to adipocyte biology and their associated phenotypic manifestations.
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PMID:Genetic disorders of adipose tissue development, differentiation, and death. 1672 6

A 54-year-old Italian female patient was admitted to our Department with the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes poorly controlled with insulin therapy. The patient was born by consanguineous parents (first degree cousins); she had acromegaloid features, diffuse lipoatrophy and muscular pseudo-hypertrophy since childhood. To confirm the clinical hypothesis of congenital generalized lipodystrophy (CGL) or Berardinelli-Seip syndrome, the sequences of AGPAT2 (encoding for 1-acyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase beta) and BSCL2 (encoding for seipin) candidate genes were analyzed. DNA analysis showed the presence of a homozygous mutation in exon 3 of the AGPAT2 gene (P112L). This is the first description of a Caucasian subject with CGL who carries the pathologic allelic variant P112L of the AGPAT2 gene.
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PMID:Description of an AGPAT2 pathologic allelic variant in a 54-year-old Caucasian woman with Berardinelli-Seip syndrome. 2174 63

Malfunctions of processes involved in cellular lipid storage and mobilization induce the pathogenesis of prevalent human diseases such as obesity, type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis. Lipid droplets are the main lipid storage depots for neutral lipids in eukaryotic cells, and as such fulfil an essential function to balance cellular lipid metabolism and energy homeostasis. Despite significant progress in identifying key metabolic enzymes involved in lipid storage and their regulation in various model organisms, some fundamental questions as to the biogenesis, subcellular distribution and inheritance of lipid droplets are as yet unsolved. In this study, we applied a set of imaging techniques such as high-resolution four-dimensional (4D) live-cell imaging, quantitative microscopy, transmission electron microscopy and electron tomography to gain insight into the spatio-temporal organization of lipid droplets during cellular growth in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This analysis revealed a high level of organization of the subcellular positioning of lipid droplets in individual cells, their directed migration towards the cellular periphery and a coordinated transfer of a subpopulation of lipid droplets into daughter cells during cell division. Lipid droplets appear to remain associated with ER membranes during cellular growth independently of their size and subcellular localization. Deletion of FLD1, the functional orthologue of the human BSCL2 gene encoding seipin, leads to impaired dynamics of yeast lipid droplets and defective lipolysis, which might be due to aberrant ER structures in these mutants. Our data suggest a role for yeast seipin as a scaffolding protein that is required for the dynamics of a specific subdomain of the ER, and provide a new aspect for the interpretation of abnormal lipid droplets phenotypes in yeast mutants lacking seipin.
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PMID:A role for seipin in lipid droplet dynamics and inheritance in yeast. 2210 Sep 22

The spectrum of adipose tissue diseases ranges from obesity to lipodystrophy, and is accompanied by insulin resistance syndrome, which promotes the occurrence of type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia and cardiovascular complications. Lipodystrophy refers to a group of rare diseases characterized by the generalized or partial absence of adipose tissue, and occurs with or without hypertrophy of adipose tissue in other sites. They are classified as being familial or acquired, and generalized or partial. The genetically determined partial forms usually occur as Dunnigan syndrome, which is a type of laminopathy that can also manifest as muscle, cardiac, neuropathic or progeroid involvement. Gene mutations encoding for PPAR-gamma, Akt2, CIDEC, perilipin and the ZMPSTE 24 enzyme are much more rare. The genetically determined generalized forms are also very rare and are linked to mutations of seipin AGPAT2, FBN1, which is accompanied by Marfan syndrome, or of BANF1, which is characterized by a progeroid syndrome without insulin resistance and with early bone complications. Glycosylation disorders are sometimes involved. Some genetically determined forms have recently been found to be due to autoinflammatory syndromes linked to a proteasome anomaly (PSMB8). They result in a lipodystrophy syndrome that occurs secondarily with fever, dermatosis and panniculitis. Then there are forms that are considered to be acquired. They may be iatrogenic (protease inhibitors in HIV patients, glucocorticosteroids, insulin, graft-versus-host disease, etc.), related to an immune system disease (sequelae of dermatopolymyositis, autoimmune polyendocrine syndromes, particularly associated with type 1 diabetes, Barraquer-Simons and Lawrence syndromes), which are promoted by anomalies of the complement system. Finally, lipomatosis is currently classified as a painful form (adiposis dolorosa or Dercum's disease) or benign symmetric multiple form, also known as Launois-Bensaude syndrome or Madelung's disease, which are sometimes related to mitochondrial DNA mutations, but are usually promoted by alcohol. In addition to the medical management of metabolic syndrome and the sometimes surgical treatment of lipodystrophy, recombinant leptin provides hope for genetically determined lipodystrophy syndromes, whereas modifications in antiretroviral treatment and tesamorelin, a GHRH analog, is effective in the metabolic syndrome of HIV patients. Other therapeutic options will undoubtedly be developed, dependent on pathophysiological advances, which today tend to classify genetically determined lipodystrophy as being related to laminopathy or to lipid droplet disorders.
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PMID:How to diagnose a lipodystrophy syndrome. 2274 2

Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a well-recognized independent risk factor for heart failure. T2DM is associated with altered cardiac energy metabolism, leading to ectopic lipid accumulation and glucose overload, the exact contribution of these two parameters remaining unclear. To provide new insight into the mechanism driving the development of diabetic cardiomyopathy, we studied a unique model of T2DM: lipodystrophic Bscl2-/- (seipin knockout [SKO]) mice. Echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging revealed hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with left ventricular dysfunction in SKO mice, and these two abnormalities were strongly correlated with hyperglycemia. Surprisingly, neither intramyocardial lipid accumulation nor lipotoxic hallmarks were detected in SKO mice. [18F]Fludeoxyglucose positron emission tomography showed increased myocardial glucose uptake. Consistently, the O-GlcNAcylated protein levels were markedly increased in an SKO heart, suggesting a glucose overload. To test this hypothesis, we treated SKO mice with the hypoglycemic sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor dapagliflozin and the insulin sensitizer pioglitazone. Both treatments reduced the O-GlcNAcylated protein levels in SKO mice, and dapagliflozin successfully prevented the development of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Our data demonstrate that glucotoxicity by itself can trigger cardiac dysfunction and that a glucose-lowering agent can correct it. This result will contribute to better understanding of the potential cardiovascular benefits of SGLT2 inhibitors.
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PMID:The Sodium-Glucose Cotransporter 2 Inhibitor Dapagliflozin Prevents Cardiomyopathy in a Diabetic Lipodystrophic Mouse Model. 2805 65

Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a well-recognized independent risk factor for heart failure (HF). T2DM is associated with altered cardiac energy metabolism, leading to ectopic lipid accumulation and glucose overload. However, the relative contribution of these two parameters remains unclear. In order to get new insight into the mechanism involved in diabetic cardiomyopathy, the cardiac phenotype of a unique T2DM mice model has been performed: the seipin knockout mice (SKO). Cardiac phenotyping revealed a diastolic dysfunction associated with hyperglycemia in these mice with a chronic activation of the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway (HBP), suggesting a glucose overload. An inhibitor of the renal sodium/glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2), dapagliflozin, successfully prevented the development of cardiomyopathy in SKO mice. This is particularly relevant, given that SGLT2i treatment reduces cardiovascular event in T2DM patients. Therefore, glucose lowering appears an important therapeutic target to prevent cardiac dysfunction associated with T2DM.
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PMID:[At the heart of diabetic cardiomyopathy: Bscl2 knockout mice to investigate glucotoxicity]. 3006 3