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Journal article

Liver nucleotide biosynthesis is linked to protection from vascular complications in individuals with long-term type 1 diabetes

From

Lund University1

University of Helsinki2

University of Copenhagen3

Umeå University4

University of Gothenburg5

National Research Council of Italy6

University of Oslo7

University of Bergen8

University of Southern Denmark9

Novo Nordisk Foundation10

Karolinska Institutet11

Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark12

Technical University of Denmark13

Bioinformatics, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark14

Bayesian modeling, Machine learning, Molecular Evolution, and Metagenomics, Bioinformatics, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark15

...and 5 more

Identification of biomarkers associated with protection from developing diabetic complications is a prerequisite for an effective prevention and treatment. The aim of the present study was to identify clinical and plasma metabolite markers associated with freedom from vascular complications in people with very long duration of type 1 diabetes (T1D).

Individuals with T1D, who despite having longer than 30 years of diabetes duration never developed major macro- or microvascular complications (non-progressors; NP) were compared with those who developed vascular complications within 25 years from diabetes onset (rapid progressors; RP) in the Scandinavian PROLONG (n = 385) and DIALONG (n = 71) cohorts.

The DIALONG study also included 75 healthy controls. Plasma metabolites were measured using gas and/or liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. Lower hepatic fatty liver indices were significant common feature characterized NPs in both studies. Higher insulin sensitivity and residual ß-cell function (C-peptide) were also associated with NPs in PROLONG.

Protection from diabetic complications was associated with lower levels of the glycolytic metabolite pyruvate and APOCIII in PROLONG, and with lower levels of thiamine monophosphate and erythritol, a cofactor and intermediate product in the pentose phosphate pathway as well as higher phenylalanine, glycine and serine in DIALONG.

Furthermore, T1D individuals showed elevated levels of picolinic acid as compared to the healthy individuals. The present findings suggest a potential beneficial shunting of glycolytic substrates towards the pentose phosphate and one carbon metabolism pathways to promote nucleotide biosynthesis in the liver.

These processes might be linked to higher insulin sensitivity and lower liver fat content, and might represent a mechanism for protection from vascular complications in individuals with long-term T1D.

Language: English
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group UK
Year: 2020
Pages: 11561
ISSN: 20452322
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-68130-y
ORCIDs: Jessen, Leon Eyrich and 0000-0002-1531-4294

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