Decreased fetal size is associated with β-Cell hyperfunction in early life and failure with age

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE-Low birth weight is associated with diabetes in adult life. Accelerated or "catch-up" postnatal growth in response to small birth size is thought to presage disease years later. Whether adult disease is caused by intrauterine β-cell-specific programming or by altered metabolism associated with catch-up growth is unknown. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS-We generated a new model of intrauterine growth restriction due to fatty acid syn - thase (FAS) haploinsufficiency (FAS deletion [FASDEL]). Developmental programming of diabetes in these mice was assessed from in utero to 1 year of age. RESULTS-FASDEL mice did not manifest catch-up growth or insulin resistance. β-Cell mass and insulin secretion were strikingly increased in young FASDEL mice, but β-cell failure and diabetes occurred with age. FASDEL β-cells had altered proliferative and apoptotic responses to the common stress of a high-fat diet. This sequence appeared to be developmentally entrained because β-cell mass was increased in utero in FASDEL mice and in another model of intrauterine growth restriction caused by ectopic expression of uncoupling protein-1. Increasing intrauterine growth in FASDEL mice by supplementing caloric intake of pregnant dams normalized β-cell mass in utero. CONCLUSIONS-Decreased intrauterine body size, independent of postnatal growth and insulin resistance, appears to regulate β-cell mass, suggesting that developing body size might represent a physiological signal that is integrated through the pancreatic β-cell to establish a template for hyperfunction in early life and β-cell failure with age. © 2008 by the American Diabetes Association.

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Chakravarthy, M. V., Zhu, Y., Wice, M. B., Coleman, T., Pappan, K. L., Marshall, C. A., … Semenkovich, C. F. (2008). Decreased fetal size is associated with β-Cell hyperfunction in early life and failure with age. Diabetes, 57(10), 2698–2707. https://doi.org/10.2337/db08-0404

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