Tissue-Specific Splicing and Dietary Interaction of a Mutant Allele Determine Muscle Metabolic Fitness in Rodents.

Diabetes

MOE Key Laboratory of Model Animal for Disease Study, Department of Endocrinology, Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital, and Model Animal Research Center, School of Medicine, Nanjing University, Nanjing

Published: August 2021


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Article Abstract

Ethnic groups are physiologically and genetically adapted to their diets. Inuit bear a frequent AS160 mutation that causes type 2 diabetes. Whether this mutation evolutionarily confers adaptation in Inuit and how it causes metabolic disorders upon dietary changes are unknown due to limitations in human studies. Here, we develop a genetically modified rat model bearing an orthologous AS160 mutation, which mimics human patients exhibiting postprandial hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia. Importantly, a sugar-rich diet aggravates metabolic abnormalities in AS160 rats. The AS160 mutation diminishes a dominant long-variant AS160 without affecting a minor short-variant AS160 in skeletal muscle, which suppresses muscle glucose utilization but induces fatty acid oxidation. This fuel switch suggests a possible adaptation in Inuit who traditionally had lipid-rich hypoglycemic diets. Finally, induction of the short-variant AS160 restores glucose utilization in rat myocytes and a mouse model. Our findings have implications for development of precision treatments for patients bearing the AS160 mutation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db21-0039DOI Listing

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