4.5 Review

Type 2 diabetes and viral infection; cause and effect of disease

Journal

DIABETES RESEARCH AND CLINICAL PRACTICE
Volume 172, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.diabres.2020.108637

Keywords

Viral infection; COVID-19; Diabetes mellitus type 2; Insulin resistance; Immune system; Immune defects; Immunometabolism; Corona virus; Infection; Antidiabetic drugs; T2D; Diabetes

Funding

  1. University of Rijeka [19-41-1551]
  2. Croatian Science Foundation [IP2016-06-8027, IP-CORONA-2020-04-2045, IP2020-02-7928]

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The recent research sheds light on how T2D impairs immune responses to viral infection and how virus-induced activation of the immune system increases the risk of developing T2D.
The recent pandemic of COVID-19 has made abundantly clear that Type 2 diabetes (T2D) increases the risk of more frequent and more severe viral infections. At the same time, pro-inflammatory cytokines of an anti-viral Type-I profile promote insulin resistance and form a risk factor for development of T2D. What this illustrates is that there is a reciprocal, detrimental interaction between the immune and endocrine system in the context of T2D. Why these two systems would interact at all long remained unclear. Recent findings indicate that transient changes in systemic metabolism are induced by the immune system as a strategy against viral infection. In people with T2D, this system fails, thereby negatively impacting the antiviral immune response. In addition, immune-mediated changes in systemic metabolism upon infection may aggravate glycemic control in T2D. In this review, we will discuss recent literature that sheds more light on how T2D impairs immune responses to viral infection and how virus-induced activation of the immune system increases risk of development of T2D. (c)& nbsp;2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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