Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Humans with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) experience several disorders of skeletal health, including
decreased bone mineral density (BMD) and increased risk for fragility fractures (i.e., osteoporosis). These
features are the primary clinical characteristics of diabetic bone disease (DBD). Evidence suggests that DBD
occurs early in the progression of T1D; involves impaired bone formation; results in micro-architectural
abnormalities and poor bone matrix quality; and coincides with hyperglycemia and a decline in endogenous
insulin and insulin-like growth factor-1 production. While many have postulated that skeletal deficits in diabetes
occur as a direct result of glucose dysregulation, our pre-clinical studies in mouse models, supported by
observational studies in humans, show that impairment in the production and action of insulin and insulin-like
growth factor-1 (IGF-1) may be root causes of DBD. Specifically, our laboratory and others have demonstrated
that in rodent models of T1D: 1) deficits in bone formation occur in the context of insulin-deficiency; 2) near-
normalization of serum glucose alone is not sufficient to prevent DBD; 3) insulin and IGF-1 therapy improve
fracture resistance and new bone formation; and 4) both insulin and IGF-1 utilize similar down-stream
pathways to promote osteoblastogenesis and bone formation. To clarify the mechanisms and signaling
pathways by which insulin and/or IGF-1 modulate osteogenesis; to understand how deficiencies or impaired
signaling of each may contribute to DBD; and to delineate how each may contribute to therapeutic approaches
to prevent or treat DBD, we propose to 1) determine how insulin and IGF-1 deficiencies contribute to DBD at
the tissue, cellular, and molecular level, and 2) how each hormone may perform overlapping and independent
effects through specific downstream signaling pathways that may ultimately become therapeutic targets for
preventing and/or reversing DBD.
Status | Active |
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Effective start/end date | 7/25/23 → 4/30/27 |
Funding
- National Institute Diabetes & Digestive & Kidney: $1,027,168.00
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