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Series GSE19420 Query DataSets for GSE19420
Status Public on Nov 29, 2010
Title Skeletal muscle mitochondrial dysfunction is secondary to T2DM
Organism Homo sapiens
Experiment type Expression profiling by array
Summary Skeletal muscle mitochondrial dysfunction is secondary to T2DM and can be improved by long-term regular exercise training

Mitochondrial dysfunction has long been implicated to play a causative role in development of type 2 diabetes (T2DM). However, a growing number of recent studies provide data that mitochondrial dysfunction is a consequence of T2DM development. The aim of our study is to clarify in further detail the causal role of mitochondrial dysfunction in T2DM by a comprehensive ex vivo analysis of mitochondrial function combined with global gene expression analysis in muscle of pre-diabetic newly diagnosed untreated T2DM subjects and long-standing insulin treated T2DM subjects compared with age- and BMI-matched controls. In addition, we assessed the impact of long-term interval exercise training on physical activity performance, mitochondrial function and glycemic control in long-standing insulin-treated T2DM subjects. Ex vivo mitochondrial density, quality and functioning was comparable between pre-diabetic subjects and matched controls, however, gene expression analysis showed a switch from carbohydrate toward lipids as energy source in pre-diabetes subjects. In contrast, long-term insulin treated T2DM subjects had slightly decreased mitochondrial density and ex vivo function. Expression of Krebs cycle and OXPHOS related genes were decreased, indicating a decreased capacity to use lipids as an energy source. The insulin-treated T2DM subjects had a lower physical activity level than pre-diabetic and normoglycemic subjects. A 52 weeks exercise training of these subjects increased submaximal oxidative efficiency, increased in vivo PCr recovery rate, as well as mildly increased in vitro mitochondrial function. Gene expression of β-oxidation, Krebs cycle and OXPHOS-related genes was increased. Our data demonstrate that mitochondrial dysfunction is rather a consequence than a causative factor in T2DM development as it was only detected in overt diabetes and not in early diabetes. Regular exercise training stabilized exogenous insulin requirement and improved mitochondrial functioning, fatty acid oxidation and general physical work load capacity in long-standing insulin-treated T2DM subjects. As such, the present study shows for the first time that long-term exercise interventions are beneficial in this group of complex diabetes patient and may prevent further metabolic deterioration.
 
Overall design Insulin-treated T2DM subjects before and after 52 weeks of exercise training (T2DM_0 and T2DM_52), normoglycemic controls (NGT) and pre-diabetes subjects (IGT) and were selected. RNA was extracted from skeletal muscle biopsies and hybridized on Affymetrix microarrays.
 
Contributor(s) van Tienen FH, Praet SF, de Feyter HM, van den Broek NM, Lindsey PJ, Schoenderwoerd K, de Coo IF, Nicolay K, Prompers JJ, Smeets HJ, van Loon LL
Citation(s) 22802091
Submission date Dec 10, 2009
Last update date Mar 25, 2019
Contact name Florence van Tienen
E-mail(s) florence.vantienen@gen.unimaas.nl
Organization name Maastricht University
Department Genetics and Cell biology
Street address Universiteitssingel 50
City Maastricht
ZIP/Postal code 6229ER
Country Netherlands
 
Platforms (1)
GPL570 [HG-U133_Plus_2] Affymetrix Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0 Array
Samples (42)
GSM482933 BA26_IGT
GSM482934 BE16_NGT
GSM482935 BL21_IGT
Relations
BioProject PRJNA120357

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE19420_RAW.tar 207.8 Mb (http)(custom) TAR (of CEL)
Processed data included within Sample table

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