The role of galectin-1 in type 2 diabetes. Clinical and experimental studies
Abstract
Aim: The purpose of this thesis was to identify a new agent in the subcutaneous adipose tissue and assess its clinical potential in the context of type 2 diabetes.
Study I: Through a combination of microdialysis and mass-spectrometry, we found increased galectin-1 levels in the subcutaneous adipose tissue in a small experimental study of 15 men with and without type 2 diabetes.
Study II and Study III: Serum galectin-1 was also independently associated with type 2 diabetes and body-mass index in of 989 individuals from the cross-sectional population based SCAPIS pilot study. Furthermore, high serum-levels of galectin-1 predicted an increased risk of incident type 2 diabetes in 4022 individuals from the longitudinal Malmö Diet-Cancer Study-Cardiovascular Cohort, after adjustment for known risk factors.
Study IV: In addition, serum levels of galectin-1 were associated with all major adipose tissue depots and presented a similar metabolic association profile as circulating galectin-3 in 502 individuals from the cross-sectional population based POEM-study.
Study V: In a small experimental study of 25 individuals from the MD-Lipolysis study, fasting serum galectin-1 correlated with insulin, and the lipid metabolism markers glycerol and free fatty acids during an oral glucose tolerance test, and adipose tissue LGALS1 expression correlated with markers of lipid metabolism. Modulation of galectin-1 activity in a cultured human preadipocyte cell-line indicated effects on triglyceride content, and genetic markers of lipid uptake, lipogenesis and glucose uptake during differentiation to mature adipocytes.
Interpretation: Galectin-1 is altered in the blood in type 2 diabetes, and may have a direct metabolic role in the adipose tissue and in type 2 diabetes development.
Parts of work
Fryk E, Perman Sundelin J, Strindberg L, Pereira M J, Federici M, Marx N, Nyström F H, Schmelz M, Svensson P-A, Eriksson J W, Borén J, Jansson P-A. Microdialysis and proteomics of subcutaneous interstitial fluid reveals increased galectin-1 in type 2 diabetes patients. Metabolism Clinical and Experimental 2016; 65: 998-1006, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.metabol.2016.04.003 Fryk E, Strindberg L, Lundqvist A, Sandstedt M, Bergfeldt L, Mattsson Hultén L, Bergström G, Jansson P-A. Galectin-1 is inversely associated with type 2 diabetes independently of obesity - A SCAPIS pilot study. Metabolism Open 2019; 4: 100017, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.metop.2019.100017 Drake I & Fryk E, Strindberg L, Lundqvist A, Rosengren A H, Groop L, Ahlqvist E, Borén J, Orho-Melander M, Jansson P-A. The role of circulating galectin-1 in type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease: evidence from cross-sectional, longitudinal, and Mendelian randomisation analyses. Diabetologia 2022; 65: 128–139, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-021-05594-1 Fryk E & Silva V, Strindberg L, Strand R, Fall T, Kullberg J, Lind L, Jansson P-A. Metabolic profiling of circulating galectin-1 and galectin-3 in a general population - A cross-sectional association study. Manuscript Silva V & Fryk E, Lembke-Ross K, Strindberg L, Bauzá Thorbrügge M, Zetterberg F, Wabitsch M, Mossberg K, Pereira M J, Wernstedt Asterholm I, Leffler H, Jansson P-A. Galectin-1 is a modulator of human adipose tissue function. Manuscript
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Medicine. Department of Molecular and Clinical Medicine
Disputation
Fredagen den 17 juni 2022, kl 9.00, Hjärtats Aula, Vita stråket 12
Date of defence
2022-06-17
emanuel.fryk@wlab.gu.se
Date
2022-05-27Author
Fryk, Emanuel
Keywords
galectin-1, type 2 diabetes, human, adipose tissue, metabolism
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-570-9 (PRINT)
978-91-8009-571-6 (PDF)
Language
eng