beta-cell function and viability in the spontaneously diabetic GK rat: information from the GK/Par colony.

  1. B Portha,
  2. M H Giroix,
  3. P Serradas,
  4. M N Gangnerau,
  5. J Movassat,
  6. F Rajas,
  7. D Bailbe,
  8. C Plachot,
  9. G Mithieux and
  10. J C Marie
  1. Laboratoire de Physiopathologie de la Nutrition, CNRS ESA 7059, Université D. Diderot, Paris, France. portha@paris7.jussieu.fr

    Abstract

    The GK rat model of type 2 diabetes is especially convenient to dissect the pathogenic mechanism necessary for the emergence of overt diabetes because all adult rats obtained in our department (GK/Par colony) to date have stable basal mild hyperglycemia and because overt diabetes is preceded by a period of normoglycemia, ranging from birth to weaning. The purpose of this article is to sum up the information so far available related to the biology of the beta-cell in the GK/Par rat. In terms of beta-cell function, there is no major intrinsic secretory defect in the prediabetic GK/Par beta-cell, and the lack of beta-cell reactivity to glucose (which reflects multiple intracellular abnormalities), as seen during the adult period when the GK/Par rats are overtly diabetic, represents an acquired defect (perhaps glucotoxicity). In terms of beta-cell population, the earliest alteration so far detected in the GK/Par rat targets the size of the beta-cell population. Several convergent data suggest that the permanently reduced beta-cell mass in the GK/Par rat reflects a limitation of beta-cell neogenesis during early fetal life, and it is conceivable that some genes among the set involved in GK diabetes belong to the subset of genes controlling early beta-cell development.

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