
Emma Ahlqvist
Associate professor

Glucose-induced Changes in Gene Expression in Human Pancreatic Islets - Causes or Consequences of Chronic Hyperglycemia
Author
Summary, in English
Dysregulation of gene expression in islets from type 2 diabetic patients might be causally involved in the development of hyperglycemia or it could develop as a consequence of hyperglycemia, i.e. glucotoxicity. To separate the genes potentially causally involved in pathogenesis from those likely to be secondary to the hyperglycemia we exposed islets from human donors to normal or high glucose concentrations for 24 hours and analyzed gene expression. We compared these findings with gene expression in islets from donors with normal glucose tolerance (NGT) and hyperglycemia (HG, including T2D). The genes whose expression changed in the same direction after short-term glucose exposure as in T2D were considered most likely to be a consequence of hyperglycemia. Genes whose expression changed in HG but not after short-term glucose exposure, in particular genes that also correlated with insulin secretion, were considered the strongest candidates for causal involvement in T2D. E.g. ERO1LB, DOCK10, IGSF11 and PRR14L were down-regulated in HG and correlated positively with insulin secretion suggesting a protective role while TMEM132C was up-regulated in HG and correlated negatively with insulin secretion suggesting a potential pathogenic role.This study provides a catalogue of gene expression changes in human pancreatic islets after exposure to glucose.
Department/s
- Genomics, Diabetes and Endocrinology
- Diabetes - Islet Patophysiology
- EXODIAB: Excellence of Diabetes Research in Sweden
Publishing year
2017-09-07
Language
English
Pages
3013-3028
Publication/Series
Diabetes
Volume
66
Issue
12
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
American Diabetes Association Inc.
Topic
- Endocrinology and Diabetes
Status
Published
Research group
- Genomics, Diabetes and Endocrinology
- Diabetes - Islet Patophysiology
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1939-327X