Insulin resistance and its treatment by thiazolidinediones.

Lebovitz He, Banerji Ma
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引用次数: 157

Abstract

Insulin resistance is a change in physiologic regulation such that a fixed dose of insulin causes less of an effect on glucose metabolism than occurs in normal individuals. The normal compensatory response to insulin resistance is an increase in insulin secretion that results in hyperinsulinemia. If the hyperinsulinemia is sufficient to overcome the insulin resistance, glucose regulation remains normal; if not, type 2 diabetes ensues. Associated with insulin resistance, however, is a cluster of other metabolic abnormalities involving body fat distribution, lipid metabolism, thrombosis and fibrinolysis, blood pressure regulation, and endothelial cell function. This cluster of abnormalities is referred to as the insulin resistance syndrome or the metabolic syndrome. It is causally related not only to the development of type 2 diabetes but also to cardiovascular disease. A major unresolved issue is whether there is a single underlying cause of this syndrome and, if so, what might it be? Several promising hypotheses have been proposed. There are some data to support the hypothesis that fetal malnutrition imprints on metabolic regulatory processes that, in later adult life, predispose to the development of the insulin resistance syndrome. Visceral obesity also has been a candidate for the cause of the syndrome. Whatever mechanism is ultimately found to be responsible, it will undoubtedly have both genetic and environmental components. Among the biochemical mediators that are likely to be responsible for the interference with insulin's effects on intermediary metabolism are free fatty acids and other products from adipose tissue. Recent data suggest that the substances stimulate serine phosphorylation of molecules involved in the initial steps of insulin action, thereby blocking the ability of these molecules to be tyrosine phosphorylated and initiate the subsequent steps of the insulin action cascade. The thiazolidinediones are a new class of agents that have been developed to treat type 2 diabetic patients. These drugs act as peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) agonists. Following their binding to the receptor, the heterodimer molecule that contains the binding site is activated. The activated complex binds to the response elements of specific genes that regulate molecules that effect insulin action and lipid metabolism. These genes are either activated or inhibited. Specifically, the thiazolidinediones improve insulin action and decrease insulin resistance. The exact mechanism by which these agents decrease insulin resistance is not clear but they do decrease the elevated free fatty acid levels present in insulin-resistant patients and they appear to change the body distribution of adipose tissue. Treatment of insulin-resistant type 2 diabetic patients with thiazolidinediones not only improves glycemic control and decreases insulin resistance, it also improves many of the abnormalities that are part of the insulin resistance syndrome.
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噻唑烷二酮类药物治疗胰岛素抵抗。
胰岛素抵抗是生理调节的一种变化,即固定剂量的胰岛素对葡萄糖代谢的影响小于正常人。胰岛素抵抗的正常代偿反应是胰岛素分泌增加,导致高胰岛素血症。如果高胰岛素血症足以克服胰岛素抵抗,则葡萄糖调节保持正常;否则,2型糖尿病就会随之而来。然而,与胰岛素抵抗相关的是一组其他代谢异常,包括体脂肪分布、脂质代谢、血栓形成和纤维蛋白溶解、血压调节和内皮细胞功能。这组异常被称为胰岛素抵抗综合征或代谢综合征。它不仅与2型糖尿病的发展有因果关系,而且与心血管疾病有因果关系。一个尚未解决的主要问题是,这种综合征是否有一个单一的潜在原因,如果有,可能是什么原因?已经提出了几个有希望的假设。有一些数据支持胎儿营养不良影响代谢调节过程的假设,这些代谢调节过程在成年后易导致胰岛素抵抗综合征的发展。内脏肥胖也是导致该综合征的一个可能原因。无论最终发现是什么机制造成的,毫无疑问,它既有遗传因素,也有环境因素。在可能干扰胰岛素对中间代谢作用的生化介质中,有游离脂肪酸和脂肪组织的其他产物。最近的数据表明,这些物质刺激参与胰岛素作用初始步骤的分子的丝氨酸磷酸化,从而阻止这些分子被酪氨酸磷酸化的能力,并启动胰岛素作用级联的后续步骤。噻唑烷二酮类药物是近年来发展起来的治疗2型糖尿病的新型药物。这些药物作为过氧化物酶体增殖激活受体(PPARgamma)激动剂。当它们与受体结合后,含有结合位点的异二聚体分子被激活。激活的复合体与特定基因的反应元件结合,这些基因调节影响胰岛素作用和脂质代谢的分子。这些基因要么被激活,要么被抑制。具体来说,噻唑烷二酮类药物改善胰岛素作用,降低胰岛素抵抗。这些药物降低胰岛素抵抗的确切机制尚不清楚,但它们确实降低了胰岛素抵抗患者体内升高的游离脂肪酸水平,它们似乎改变了脂肪组织的体内分布。用噻唑烷二酮类药物治疗胰岛素抵抗型2型糖尿病患者不仅可以改善血糖控制和降低胰岛素抵抗,还可以改善胰岛素抵抗综合征的许多异常情况。
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