4.7 Article

Pathogenesis of A-β+ Ketosis-Prone Diabetes

Journal

DIABETES
Volume 62, Issue 3, Pages 912-922

Publisher

AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db12-0624

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R21-DK-082827]
  2. Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Center at Baylor College of Medicine [P30-DK-079638]
  3. NIH [RO1-DK-056689, PO1-DK-58398]
  4. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service [58-6250-6001]

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A(-)beta(+) ketosis-prone diabetes (KPD) is an emerging syndrome of obesity, unprovoked ketoacidosis, reversible beta-cell dysfunction, and near-normoglycemic remission. We combined metabolomics with targeted kinetic measurements to investigate its pathophysiology. Fasting plasma fatty acids, acylcarnitines, and amino acids were quantified in 20 KPD patients compared with 19 nondiabetic control subjects. Unique signatures in KPD-higher glutamate but lower glutamine and citrulline concentrations, increased beta-hydroxybutyryl-carnitine, decreased isovaleryl-carnitine (a leucine catabolite), and decreased tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates-generated hypotheses that were tested through stable isotope/mass spectrometry protocols in nine new-onset, stable KPD patients compared with seven nondiabetic control subjects. Free fatty acid flux and acetyl CoA flux and oxidation were similar, but KPD had slower acetyl CoA conversion to beta-hydroxybutyrate; higher fasting beta-hydroxybutyrate concentration; slower beta-hydroxybutyrate oxidation; faster leucine oxidative decarboxylation; accelerated glutamine conversion to glutamate without increase in glutamate carbon oxidation; and slower citrulline flux, with diminished glutamine amide-nitrogen transfer to citrulline. The confluence of metabolomic and kinetic data indicate a distinctive pathogenic sequence: impaired ketone oxidation and fatty acid utilization for energy, leading to accelerated leucine catabolism and transamination of alpha-ketoglutarate to glutamate, with impaired TCA anaplerosis of glutamate carbon. They highlight a novel process of defective energy production and ketosis in A(-)beta(+) KPD. Diabetes 62:912-922, 2013

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