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Central role and mechanisms of beta-cell dysfunction and death in Friedreich ataxia- associated diabetes

Authors :
Cnop, Miriam
Igoillo Esteve, Mariana
Rai, Myriam
Begu, Audrey
Serroukh, Yasmina
Depondt, Chantal
Musuaya, Anyishaï
Marhfour, Ihsane
Ladrière, Laurence
Moles Lopez, Xavier
Lefkaditis, Dionysios
Moore, Fabrice
Brion, Jean Pierre
Cooper, Mark J
Schapira, Anthony HV
Clark, Anne
Koeppen, A.H.
Marchetti, Piero
Pandolfo, Massimo
Eizirik, Decio L.
Fery, Françoise
Cnop, Miriam
Igoillo Esteve, Mariana
Rai, Myriam
Begu, Audrey
Serroukh, Yasmina
Depondt, Chantal
Musuaya, Anyishaï
Marhfour, Ihsane
Ladrière, Laurence
Moles Lopez, Xavier
Lefkaditis, Dionysios
Moore, Fabrice
Brion, Jean Pierre
Cooper, Mark J
Schapira, Anthony HV
Clark, Anne
Koeppen, A.H.
Marchetti, Piero
Pandolfo, Massimo
Eizirik, Decio L.
Fery, Françoise
Source :
Annals of neurology, 72 (6
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Objective: Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disease caused in almost all cases by homozygosity for a GAA trinucleotide repeat expansion in the frataxin gene. Frataxin is a mitochondrial protein involved in iron homeostasis. FRDA patients have a high prevalence of diabetes, the pathogenesis of which is not known. We aimed to evaluate the relative contribution of insulin resistance and β-cell failure and the pathogenic mechanisms involved in FRDA diabetes. Methods: Forty-one FRDA patients, 26 heterozygous carriers of a GAA expansion, and 53 controls underwent oral and intravenous glucose tolerance tests. β-Cell proportion was quantified in postmortem pancreas sections from 9 unrelated FRDA patients. Using an in vitro disease model, we studied how frataxin deficiency affects β-cell function and survival. Results: FRDA patients had increased abdominal fat and were insulin resistant. This was not compensated for by increased insulin secretion, resulting in a markedly reduced disposition index, indicative of pancreatic β-cell failure. Loss of glucose tolerance was driven by β-cell dysfunction, which correlated with abdominal fatness. In postmortem pancreas sections, pancreatic islets of FRDA patients had a lower β-cell content. RNA interference–mediated frataxin knockdown impaired glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and induced apoptosis in rat β cells and human islets. Frataxin deficiency sensitized β cells to oleate-induced and endoplasmic reticulum stress-induced apoptosis, which could be prevented by the incretins glucagon-like peptide-1 and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide. Interpretation: Pancreatic β-cell dysfunction is central to diabetes development in FRDA as a result of mitochondrial dysfunction and higher sensitivity to metabolic and endoplasmic reticulum stress-induced β-cell death. ANN NEUROL 2012;72:971–982<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Annals of neurology, 72 (6
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn837139482
Document Type :
Electronic Resource