罪魁祸首还是后果:了解糖尿病肌肉代谢失调。

Colleen L O'Reilly, Selina Uranga, James D Fluckey
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摘要

尽管有大量研究致力于寻找导致这种令人衰弱的疾病的罪魁祸首,但 2 型糖尿病(T2D)的发病率仍在持续上升。可以说,骨骼肌是葡萄糖处置的最重要贡献者,因此成为胰岛素抵抗和 T2D 研究的明确目标。在 T2D 的发展过程中,骨骼肌与代谢失调有着明显的联系,但如何确定这种疾病的罪魁祸首和后果却一直难以捉摸。骨骼肌中新出现的证据表明,一种关键的合成代谢调控蛋白--哺乳动物雷帕霉素靶蛋白(mTOR)及其相关复合物(mTORC1 和 mTORC2)--与胰岛素刺激葡萄糖摄取的典型信号之间存在有影响力的交叉对话。对细胞信号串扰的这一新认识模糊了胰岛素抵抗的罪魁祸首和后果的界限。在此,我们简要回顾骨骼肌中胰岛素信号传导的最新认识,以及有利于合成代谢的合成代谢反应如何直接影响细胞葡萄糖处置。这篇综述强调了蛋白质和葡萄糖调节途径之间的关键交叉相互作用,以及这对设计控制骨骼肌葡萄糖调节功能的新治疗靶点可能产生的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Culprits or consequences: Understanding the metabolic dysregulation of muscle in diabetes.

Culprits or consequences: Understanding the metabolic dysregulation of muscle in diabetes.

Culprits or consequences: Understanding the metabolic dysregulation of muscle in diabetes.

Culprits or consequences: Understanding the metabolic dysregulation of muscle in diabetes.

The prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) continues to rise despite the amount of research dedicated to finding the culprits of this debilitating disease. Skeletal muscle is arguably the most important contributor to glucose disposal making it a clear target in insulin resistance and T2D research. Within skeletal muscle there is a clear link to metabolic dysregulation during the progression of T2D but the determination of culprits vs consequences of the disease has been elusive. Emerging evidence in skeletal muscle implicates influential cross talk between a key anabolic regulatory protein, the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and its associated complexes (mTORC1 and mTORC2), and the well-described canonical signaling for insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. This new understanding of cellular signaling crosstalk has blurred the lines of what is a culprit and what is a consequence with regard to insulin resistance. Here, we briefly review the most recent understanding of insulin signaling in skeletal muscle, and how anabolic responses favoring anabolism directly impact cellular glucose disposal. This review highlights key cross-over interactions between protein and glucose regulatory pathways and the implications this may have for the design of new therapeutic targets for the control of glucoregulatory function in skeletal muscle.

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