A signal for β-cell failure

J Avruch - Nature, 1998 - nature.com
Nature, 1998nature.com
A hallmark of human type 2 diabetes is hyperglycaemia—an excess of glucose in the
bloodstream. Normally, the pancreatic β-cell compensate for this by secreting more insulin,
but this fail-safe mechanism seems to malfunction in patients with the condition. Now, by
generating mice that lack the insulin-receptor substrate-2 (IRS-2) gene, one group has
shown that IRS-2 may be responsible for both increased insulin resistance and reduced
insulin compenation. The knockout mice develop a syndrome that closely resembles human …
A hallmark of human type 2 diabetes is hyperglycaemia — an excess of glucose in the bloodstream. Normally, the pancreatic β-cell compensate for this by secreting more insulin, but this fail-safe mechanism seems to malfunction in patients with the condition. Now, by generating mice that lack the insulin-receptor substrate-2 (IRS-2) gene, one group has shown that IRS-2 may be responsible for both increased insulin resistance and reduced insulin compenation. The knockout mice develop a syndrome that closely resembles human type 2 diabetes and, importantly, they have fewer β-cells than wild-type mice.
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