β-Cell lipotoxicity is thought to play an important role in the development of type 2 diabetes. However, no study has examined its role in type 1 diabetes, which could be clinically relevant for slow-onset type 1 diabetes. Reports of enhanced cytokine toxicity in fat-laden islets are consistent with the hypothesis that lipid and cytokine toxicity may be synergistic.
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February 2007
We determined the effect of 48-h elevation of plasma free fatty acids (FFA) on insulin secretion during hyperglycemic clamps in control female Wistar rats (group a) and in the following female rat models of progressive beta-cell dysfunction: lean Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rats, both wild-type (group b) and heterozygous for the fa mutation in the leptin receptor gene (group c); obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats (nonprediabetic; group d); obese prediabetic (fa/fa) ZDF rats (group e); and obese (fa/fa) diabetic ZDF rats (group f). FFA induced insulin resistance in all groups but increased C-peptide levels (index of absolute insulin secretion) only in obese prediabetic ZDF rats. Insulin secretion corrected for insulin sensitivity using a hyperbolic or power relationship (disposition index or compensation index, respectively, both indexes of beta-cell function) was decreased by FFA.
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