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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Novel canine models of obese prediabetes and mild type 2 diabetes.

Journal:
American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism
Year:
2010
Authors:
Ionut, Viorica et al.
Affiliation:
Keck School of Medicine · United States
Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Researchers have developed a new way to study type 2 diabetes in dogs, which is important because existing models don't accurately reflect the condition. In this study, lean dogs were fed a high-fat diet that made them gain weight and become less sensitive to insulin, a hormone that helps control blood sugar. After this, the dogs received a medication that affected their insulin-producing cells, leading to three different levels of diabetes: some dogs had high blood sugar, others had mild diabetes, and some were in a prediabetic state. Twelve weeks later, the dogs that didn't develop full diabetes still showed increased body fat and reduced insulin function. This research provides valuable models for understanding diabetes and testing new treatments.

Abstract

Human type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is often characterized by obesity-associated insulin resistance (IR) and beta-cell function deficiency. Development of relevant large animal models to study T2DM is important and timely, because most existing models have dramatic reductions in pancreatic function and no associated obesity and IR, features that resemble more T1DM than T2DM. Our goal was to create a canine model of T2DM in which obesity-associated IR occurs first, followed by moderate reduction in beta-cell function, leading to mild diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance. Lean dogs (n = 12) received a high-fat diet that increased visceral (52%, P < 0.001) and subcutaneous (130%, P < 0.001) fat and resulted in a 31% reduction in insulin sensitivity (S(I)) (5.8 +/- 0.7 x 10(-4) to 4.1 +/- 0.5 x 10(-4) microU x ml(-1) x min(-1), P < 0.05). Animals then received a single low dose of streptozotocin (STZ; range 30-15 mg/kg). The decrease in beta-cell function was dose dependent and resulted in three diabetes models: 1) frank hyperglycemia (high STZ dose); 2) mild T2DM with normal or impaired fasting glucose (FG), 2-h glucose >200 mg/dl during OGTT and 77-93% AIR(g) reduction (intermediate dose); and 3) prediabetes with normal FG, normal 2-h glucose during OGTT and 17-74% AIR(g) reduction (low dose). Twelve weeks after STZ, animals without frank diabetes had 58% more body fat, decreased beta-cell function (17-93%), and 40% lower S(I). We conclude that high-fat feeding and variable-dose STZ in dog result in stable models of obesity, insulin resistance, and 1) overt diabetes, 2) mild T2DM, or 3) impaired glucose tolerance. These models open new avenues for studying the mechanism of compensatory changes that occur in T2DM and for evaluating new therapeutic strategies to prevent progression or to treat overt diabetes.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19843874/