Molecular Metabolism (Aug 2017)

The Munich MIDY Pig Biobank – A unique resource for studying organ crosstalk in diabetes

  • Andreas Blutke,
  • Simone Renner,
  • Florian Flenkenthaler,
  • Mattias Backman,
  • Serena Haesner,
  • Elisabeth Kemter,
  • Erik Ländström,
  • Christina Braun-Reichhart,
  • Barbara Albl,
  • Elisabeth Streckel,
  • Birgit Rathkolb,
  • Cornelia Prehn,
  • Alessandra Palladini,
  • Michal Grzybek,
  • Stefan Krebs,
  • Stefan Bauersachs,
  • Andrea Bähr,
  • Andreas Brühschwein,
  • Cornelia A. Deeg,
  • Erica De Monte,
  • Michaela Dmochewitz,
  • Caroline Eberle,
  • Daniela Emrich,
  • Robert Fux,
  • Frauke Groth,
  • Sophie Gumbert,
  • Antonia Heitmann,
  • Arne Hinrichs,
  • Barbara Keßler,
  • Mayuko Kurome,
  • Miriam Leipig-Rudolph,
  • Kaspar Matiasek,
  • Hazal Öztürk,
  • Christiane Otzdorff,
  • Myriam Reichenbach,
  • Horst Dieter Reichenbach,
  • Alexandra Rieger,
  • Birte Rieseberg,
  • Marco Rosati,
  • Manuel Nicolas Saucedo,
  • Anna Schleicher,
  • Marlon R. Schneider,
  • Kilian Simmet,
  • Judith Steinmetz,
  • Nicole Übel,
  • Patrizia Zehetmaier,
  • Andreas Jung,
  • Jerzy Adamski,
  • Ünal Coskun,
  • Martin Hrabě de Angelis,
  • Christian Simmet,
  • Mathias Ritzmann,
  • Andrea Meyer-Lindenberg,
  • Helmut Blum,
  • Georg J. Arnold,
  • Thomas Fröhlich,
  • Rüdiger Wanke,
  • Eckhard Wolf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2017.06.004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 8
pp. 931 – 940

Abstract

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Objective: The prevalence of diabetes mellitus and associated complications is steadily increasing. As a resource for studying systemic consequences of chronic insulin insufficiency and hyperglycemia, we established a comprehensive biobank of long-term diabetic INSC94Y transgenic pigs, a model of mutant INS gene-induced diabetes of youth (MIDY), and of wild-type (WT) littermates. Methods: Female MIDY pigs (n = 4) were maintained with suboptimal insulin treatment for 2 years, together with female WT littermates (n = 5). Plasma insulin, C-peptide and glucagon levels were regularly determined using specific immunoassays. In addition, clinical chemical, targeted metabolomics, and lipidomics analyses were performed. At age 2 years, all pigs were euthanized, necropsied, and a broad spectrum of tissues was taken by systematic uniform random sampling procedures. Total beta cell volume was determined by stereological methods. A pilot proteome analysis of pancreas, liver, and kidney cortex was performed by label free proteomics. Results: MIDY pigs had elevated fasting plasma glucose and fructosamine concentrations, C-peptide levels that decreased with age and were undetectable at 2 years, and an 82% reduced total beta cell volume compared to WT. Plasma glucagon and beta hydroxybutyrate levels of MIDY pigs were chronically elevated, reflecting hallmarks of poorly controlled diabetes in humans. In total, ∼1900 samples of different body fluids (blood, serum, plasma, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, and synovial fluid) as well as ∼17,000 samples from ∼50 different tissues and organs were preserved to facilitate a plethora of morphological and molecular analyses. Principal component analyses of plasma targeted metabolomics and lipidomics data and of proteome profiles from pancreas, liver, and kidney cortex clearly separated MIDY and WT samples. Conclusions: The broad spectrum of well-defined biosamples in the Munich MIDY Pig Biobank that will be available to the scientific community provides a unique resource for systematic studies of organ crosstalk in diabetes in a multi-organ, multi-omics dimension.

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