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    Diabetes. 2008 Oct;57(10):2698-707. Epub 2008 Jun 30.

    Decreased fetal size is associated with beta-cell hyperfunction in early life and failure with age.

    Chakravarthy MV, Zhu Y, Wice MB, Coleman T, Pappan KL, Marshall CA, McDaniel ML, Semenkovich CF.

    Department of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Lipid Research, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.

    Comment in:

    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 beta-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 synthase (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. beta-Cell mass and insulin secretion were strikingly increased in young FASDEL mice, but beta-cell failure and diabetes occurred with age. FASDEL beta-cells had altered proliferative and apoptotic responses to the common stress of a high-fat diet. This sequence appeared to be developmentally entrained because beta-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 beta-cell mass in utero. CONCLUSIONS: Decreased intrauterine body size, independent of postnatal growth and insulin resistance, appears to regulate beta-cell mass, suggesting that developing body size might represent a physiological signal that is integrated through the pancreatic beta-cell to establish a template for hyperfunction in early life and beta-cell failure with age.

    PMID: 18591393 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 2551680

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