Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Enrolling by invitation
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Exercise
  • Insulin Sensitivity
  • Skeletal Muscle
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: Non-RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: A case-control study with two groups of participants with different genetic background on the TBC1D4 gene: Homozygote carriers of a p.Arg684T TBC1D4 gene-variant None carriers (matched controls) of the p.Arg684T TBC1D4 gene-variant Masking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Basic Science

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 20 years and 70 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Recently a common Greenlandic nonsense p.Arg684erTer variant (in which arginine is replaced by a termination codon) in the gene TBC1D4 was discovered. The variant has an allele frequency of 17%. Homozygous carriers of this TBC1D4 variant have impaired glucose tolerance and a 10-fold enhanced risk of...

Recently a common Greenlandic nonsense p.Arg684erTer variant (in which arginine is replaced by a termination codon) in the gene TBC1D4 was discovered. The variant has an allele frequency of 17%. Homozygous carriers of this TBC1D4 variant have impaired glucose tolerance and a 10-fold enhanced risk of T2D. The investigators propose to carry out comprehensive metabolic phenotyping of adult Inuits carrying zero or two alleles of the TBC1D4 variant. The investigators hypothesise that regulation of TBC1D4 in skeletal muscle is pivotal in regulating glucose uptake during exercise, during physiological insulin stimulation, and for the ability of an acute bout of exercise to improve insulin sensitivity to regulate glucose metabolism in humans. Our overall aims in the present project are to: Determine whether the TBC1D4 p.Arg684Ter variant affects the regulation of glucose uptake in skeletal muscle during exercise and during physiological insulin stimulation. Determine the effect of the TBC1D4 p.Arg684Ter variant for the ability of acute exercise to insulin sensitize skeletal muscle to regulate glucose metabolism. Define the metabolic pathways affected by the p.Arg684Ter variant in order to identify causal factors responsible for the diabetic phenotype of Inuit carriers. The knowledge generated will contribute to additional explanatory clues to the increased frequency of T2D in the carriers. Study population: The Inuit Health in Transition (IHIT) study is a study of adults in West and East Greenland. The participants were selected through a stratified random sample and data were collected in 1999-2010 using clinical procedures, sampling of biological material, and questionnaires. To accomplish the goal, the investigators will carry out comprehensive metabolic phenotyping of Inuits carrying zero (n=10) or two (n=10) alleles of the TBC1D4 p.Arg684Ter variant recruited from this cohort. Based on an effect of 1.2 SD as found for plasma glucose levels during an Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT) in the previous study (6) between homozygous carriers and non-carriers of the TBCD14 variant, the investigators achieve 89% power at p=0.05 when recruiting 10 homozygous carriers and 10 non-carriers. Methods: Genotyping of the IHIT cohort has already been performed. Thus, the investigators can re-call study participants for the present study based on their known genotype. The investigators intend to perform highly invasive physiological studies of subjects harboring the TBC1D4 point mutation and in control subjects matched by age, gender and BMI. The participants will be nondiabetic (25-50 yrs) males recruited through the IHIT cohort register (n=4,200). The recruitment, screening and initial clinical investigations (oral glucose tolerance test and physical exercise tests, including customization to a one-legged cycling ergometer) will take place in Greenland. The most invasive part of the study, described below, will take place in Copenhagen, Denmark. During the stay in Copenhagen participants will receive an energy-matched, standardized diet to be consumed 3 days prior to the intervention study. On the study day the participants will arrive in the laboratory after an overnight fast. Catheters will be placed in both femoral veins (V) and in one femoral artery (A). A muscle biopsy will be obtained from vastus lateralis of one leg (resting leg). The participants will then perform one legged knee extensor exercise for one hour leaving the other leg as a rested control leg. Immediately after exercise a biopsy will be obtained from the exercising leg and the participants will rest in the fasted state for 3 hours before a third set of muscle biopsies (from both legs) and one abdominal subcutaneous fat biopsy are taken. Subsequently, insulin sensitivity will be evaluated during a 2-hour physiological hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp. By the end of the clamp a final set of biopsies (both legs) and one abdominal subcutaneous fat biopsy will be obtained. Throughout the study day sampling of artery and venous blood/plasma samples allow estimation of substrate extraction by the two legs. Further, measures of artery blood flow by Ultrasound Doppler technique will allow a final calculation of substrate uptake/release across the two legs before exercise, during exercise and in recovery from exercise. Importantly, the ability for insulin to stimulate theses process can be evaluated in both a rested and in the prior exercised leg. The investigators plan to carry out deep transcript profiling of muscle tissue samples and define correlations between age, sex, BMI, genetic variants, and the transcriptional profiles in order to understand the impact on gene regulation of identified metabolic genetic variants. In order to define key biochemical pathways affected by the mutated TBC1D4, the investigators will perform metabolomic analyses of the muscle biopsy samples. In order to identify putative targeted pathways affected by the mutation, the investigators will perform mass spectrometry-based interactome as well as proteomic / phosphoproteomic analyses. Based on these data and data obtained from the metabolic analyses, the investigators will be better able to identify the affected metabolic processes involved in the progression towards the diabetic phenotype of the Inuit carriers. Such pathways will in subsequent analyses be studied biochemically in more detail including additional (to phosphorylation) post translational modifications (e.g. glycosylation) as well as expression/activities of key enzymes in glucose and fat metabolism.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04170972
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Not Provided