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You are what you eat, or are you? The challenges of translating high-fat-fed rodents to human obesity and diabetesOpen

机译:你是你吃的东西,还是你?将高脂啮齿动物转化为人类肥胖和糖尿病的挑战

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Obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) are rapidly growing worldwide epidemics with major health consequences. Various human-based studies have confirmed that both genetic and environmental factors (particularly high-caloric diets and sedentary lifestyle) greatly contribute to human T2DM. Interactions between obesity, insulin resistance and β-cell dysfunction result in human T2DM, but the mechanisms regulating the interplay among these impairments remain unclear. Rodent models of high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity have been used widely to study human obesity and T2DM. With >9000 publications on PubMed over the past decade alone, many aspects of rodent T2DM have been elucidated; however, correlation to human obesity/diabetes remains poor. This review investigates the reasons for this translational discrepancy by critically evaluating rodent HFD models. Dietary modification in rodents appears to have limited translatable benefit for understanding and treating human obesity and diabetes due—at least in part—to divergent dietary compositions, species/strain and gender variability, inconsistent disease penetrance, severity and duration and lack of resemblance to human obesogenic pathophysiology. Therefore future research efforts dedicated to acquiring translationally relevant data—specifically human data, rather than findings based on rodent studies—would accelerate our understanding of disease mechanisms and development of therapeutics for human obesity/T2DM.
机译:肥胖和2型糖尿病(T2DM)在世界范围内迅速流行,对健康产生重大影响。各种基于人体的研究均证实,遗传因素和环境因素(尤其是高热量饮食和久坐的生活方式)对人类T2DM的影响很大。肥胖,胰岛素抵抗和β细胞功能障碍之间的相互作用导致人类T2DM,但调节这些损伤之间相互作用的机制仍不清楚。高脂饮食(HFD)引起的肥胖的啮齿动物模型已被广泛用于研究人类肥胖和2型糖尿病。仅在过去十年中,PubMed上就有超过9000种出版物,阐明了啮齿动物T2DM的许多方面。然而,与人类肥胖/糖尿病的相关性仍然很差。这篇综述通过严格评估啮齿动物HFD模型来研究这种翻译差异的原因。啮齿类动物的饮食改良在理解和治疗人类肥胖和糖尿病方面可能具有有限的翻译益处,这至少部分是由于饮食成分,物种/品系和性别变异性不同,疾病渗透率,严重程度和持续时间不一致以及与人类缺乏相似之处致肥胖的病理生理。因此,未来致力于获取翻译相关数据(尤其是人类数据)而不是基于啮齿类动物研究的发现的研究工作将加速我们对人类肥胖症/ T2DM疾病机理和治疗方法的了解。

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