The metabolic abnormalities of type 2 diabetes can be reversed reproducibly by bariatric surgery. By quantifying the major pathophysiological abnormalities in insulin secretion and insulin action after surgery, the sequence of events leading to restoration of normal metabolism can be defined. Liver fat levels fall within days and normal hepatic insulin sensitivity is restored. Simultaneously, plasma glucose levels return towards normal. Insulin sensitivity of muscle remains abnormal, at least over the weeks and months after bariatric surgery. The effect of the surgery is explicable solely in terms of energy restriction. By combining this information with prospective observation of the changes immediately preceding the onset of type 2 diabetes, a clear picture emerges. Insulin resistance in muscle, caused by inherited and environmental factors, facilitates the development of fatty liver during positive energy balance. Once established, the increased insulin secretion required to maintain plasma glucose levels will further increase liver fat deposition. Fatty liver causes resistance to insulin suppression of hepatic glucose output as well as raised plasma triacylglycerol. Exposure of beta cells to increased levels of fatty acids, derived from circulating and locally deposited triacylglycerol, suppresses glucose-mediated insulin secretion. This is reversible initially, but eventually becomes permanent. The essential time sequence of the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes is now evident. Muscle insulin resistance determines the rate at which fatty liver progresses, and ectopic fat deposition in liver and islet underlies the related dynamic defects of hepatic insulin resistance and beta cell dysfunction. These defects are capable of dramatic reversal under hypoenergetic feeding conditions, completely in early diabetes and to a worthwhile extent in more established disease.
Introduction
Puzzles are often most easily solved backwards. Isaac Newton exemplified this by using his newly invented and secret tool of calculus to establish the answer to unsolved mathematical problems, then presenting the proof in conventional mathematical terms having worked backwards to the question [1]. The same technique can be applied to unravelling the pathogenesis of disease, but there is a snag—a cure for the disease has to be discovered so that the pathogenesis may be observed, step by step, in reverse. However, it is now possible to achieve a cure in groups of people with type 2 diabetes. What happens during the period of return to normal insulin sensitivity and normal beta cell function?
Bariatric surgery and type 2 diabetes
The acid test for any new treatment is a prospective, randomised comparison with conventional treatment. Dixon and colleagues randomised patients with a BMI of 30–40 kg/m2 and type 2 diabetes duration of <2 years to a conventional treatment group or a surgically treated group [2]. The conventional group was treated using intensive lifestyle modification programmes, dietary advice, oral hypoglycaemic agents and insulin, and was followed up every 6 weeks. The surgically treated group underwent laparoscopic placement of an adjustable gastric band in addition to receiving the conventional treatment. The primary endpoint was remission of diabetes, defined as an HbA1c level of <6.2% and a fasting plasma glucose level of <7.0 mmol/l, off all treatment. At 2 years, remission was achieved in 13% of the conventional treatment group and 73% of the surgical group. Fasting plasma glucose fell from the baseline level of 8.8 mmol/l to 7.7 mmol/l in the conventional treatment group and to 5.9 mmol/l in the surgically treated group (Fig. 1). This was associated with weight change from 106 kg at baseline to 105 kg and 85 kg in the two groups, respectively (Fig. 1). The importance of the study lies in the demonstration, in a prospective, randomised setting, that normalisation of plasma glucose can be achieved in groups of individuals. Diabetologists have long known that the tiny proportion of iron-willed people who can substantially decrease their weight and maintain this, can exhibit a return to normal metabolism. Dixon and colleagues have demonstrated a more widely applicable phenomenon.
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However, gastric banding is the least dramatic of possible surgical procedures to achieve weight loss. It involves the placement of an adjustable cuff around the gastro-oesophageal junction, and may be done via a laparoscope. At the other end of the scale, bilio-pancreatic diversion consists of distal gastric resection with closure of duodenal stump, trans-section of the small intestine, proximal anastomosis to stomach and anastomosis of the remaining ileum (carrying bilio-pancreatic secretions) to the distal ileum. Simple gastric bypass involves ileo-gastric anastomosis so that food bypasses the duodenum and upper jejunum. An earlier systematic review indicated resolution of diabetes in 99% after bilio-pancreatic diversion, 84% for gastric bypass and 48% for gastric banding [3]. Gastric bypass surgery, with its attendant risks, has been known for 20 years to bring about major weight loss and improve glucose tolerance in morbidly obese individuals. In the original series by Pories et al., 86 of 88 obese people with diabetes reverted to normal glucose tolerance within 4 months, and this remained normal over 6 years of follow-up [4].
Time-course of reversal of pathogenic factors
Recently, several detailed studies of metabolic changes following gastric bypass surgery have thrown further light upon reversal of type 2 diabetes. A prospective study of ten obese patients with type 2 diabetes undergoing bilio-pancreatic diversion, with re-study after 2 years, demonstrated weight change from 136 to 89 kg [5]. This was accompanied by a fall in the fasting plasma glucose level from 7.7 to 5.1 mmol/l and a decrease in the HbA1c level from 8.2% to 4.1%. The improvement in insulin sensitivity measured during a euglycaemic–hyperinsulinaemic clamp was not surprising in the context of the weight loss (the glucose disposal rate per kg of fat-free mass rose from 26.4 to 55.2 μmol min−1; it was 68.7 μmol min−1 in a non-diabetic post-bypass group). However, the return of beta cell sensitivity for insulin secretion in the type 2 diabetic patients (from 44 to 76 pmol min−1 m−2 [mmol/l]−1) to levels above those seen in the non-diabetic post-bypass control group (65 pmol min−1 m−2 [mmol/l]−1) was striking. The term ‘inexorable decline’ is traditionally applied to beta cell function in established type 2 diabetes. The recent data clearly demonstrate that this is not necessarily the case, at least in the first few years after diagnosis. What could underlie this reversal of the twin pathogenic factors of type 2 diabetes?
Insight into the time-course of change following a gastric bypass has been gained from detailed studies conducted over the first 4 weeks after surgery [6]. A group of morbidly obese people with a diabetes duration of between 1 and 3 years were studied. Preoperatively, the fasting blood glucose level was 7.8 mmol/l and, as would be expected, both beta cell sensitivity to glucose and whole body insulin sensitivity were low. After pancreatobiliary diversion, the group were re-studied at 1 and 4 weeks. Parenteral feeding provided 7.5 MJ/day (1,800 kcal/day) for the first six postoperative days, but this would represent a sudden decrease in energy consumption. As body weight was 152 kg preoperatively, a daily intake of about 13.4 MJ/day (3,200 kcal/day) would be required for weight maintenance [7]. By 7 days postoperatively, fat mass had decreased by 4.4 kg and the fasting blood glucose level had fallen to 5.9 mmol/l (Fig. 2). Insulin sensitivity, measured as the glucose infusion rate during euglycaemic–hyperinsulinaemic clamps, had doubled. Correspondingly, the fasting plasma insulin level had fallen from 136 to 108 pmol/l. By 4 weeks postoperatively, the fasting plasma glucose level had fallen further (to 4.8 mmol/l), with no further change in insulin sensitivity. The observed change in insulin sensitivity requires careful consideration.
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The euglycaemic–hyperinsulinaemic clamp is usually assumed to reflect muscle insulin sensitivity [8]. This is because elevations in plasma insulin levels rapidly bring about complete suppression of glucose production by the liver. Under these circumstances, the rate at which glucose is infused directly reflects the rate at which muscle tissue is stimulated to take up glucose. However, it has been known for some time that glucose production by the liver is not completely suppressed during the clamp in obese individuals [9]. Thus, this method underestimates glucose uptake by muscle, because the continuing production of glucose by the liver is ignored. The relevance of this for understanding pathogenesis has been elegantly demonstrated by Petersen and colleagues [10]. Figure 3 shows that the marked increase in glucose requirements during euglycaemic hyperinsulinaemia is almost entirely explained by greater suppression of liver glucose production, and that the total uptake of glucose by muscle is essentially unchanged. This figure also illustrates that the change in liver response to insulin represents a remarkable normalisation of insulin suppression of glucose production by the liver. This observation focuses attention upon the early changes in the liver during the onset of energy restriction.
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The changes in liver volume and liver fat content during a period of very low energy intake have been examined [11]. The study was undertaken to define the rate of change of liver volume. This is important as a reduction in liver size before bariatric surgery makes the procedure easier to perform and considerably decreases the complication rate. Over a 12 week period, during which participants ingested 1.88–2.85 MJ/day (450–680 kcal/day), liver volume decreased by 30%. However, 80% of the change occurred during the first 2 weeks. During weight loss there is a tight relationship between liver volume and liver fat content [12], and it appeared that intra-hepatic fat was mobilised more rapidly than visceral or subcutaneous fat. This suggestion that liver fat stores are called upon first at the onset of negative energy balance has been examined directly by two studies using magnetic resonance methodology.
Petersen and colleagues observed that a loss of 8% of body weight over 7 weeks was associated with an 81% decrease in hepatic fat [10]. It is clear that liver fat is mobilised within days of onset of hypoenergetic feeding. Hollingsworth and colleagues observed the changes that accompanied weight loss of 3 kg over the first 10 days of a low-energy diet [13]. Liver fat fell significantly from 9.4 ± 1.8% at baseline to 8.2 ± 1.1% at 3 days and 7.0 ± 1.3 at 10 days (normal liver fat content <5%), demonstrating that very early substantial mobilisation of this fat depot occurs during dietary restriction.
Overall, this early and major decrease in liver fat occurs at the same time as normalisation of hepatic insulin sensitivity and a fall in fasting blood glucose level. This is entirely as would be expected from knowledge of the relationship between the extent of hepatic steatosis and suppression of hepatic glucose production by insulin [14, 15]. The reason for the rapid return of beta cell sensitivity to glucose is less certain. Even in normal individuals, insulin secretion can be blunted by constant hyperglycaemia [16], and the removal of ‘glucotoxicity’ could be a partial explanation. In addition, it is known that fat accumulation in and around the pancreatic islets is directly associated with impaired beta cell function in humans [17]. In obese rodents, the onset of hyperglycaemia is preceded by a rapid increase in pancreatic fat [18], and the mechanism of impairment of insulin secretion during chronic exposure of islet beta cells to fatty acids has been shown to be marked suppression of pyruvate cycling, which normally occurs during hyperglycaemia [19]. It is possible that such ectopic fat around the islets could be mobilised with the same dynamics as intra-hepatic fat, and that the early phase of fasting relieves the beta cells of the inhibitory burden of locally released fatty acids and diacylglycerol.
Fois gras in man and beast
Obesity is strongly related to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease [20]. This is true in early life as well as in adulthood. An autopsy study has demonstrated a dose relationship between the degree to which children are overweight and the presence of fatty liver [21]. In adolescence, 30% of obese individuals have fatty liver [22] and the extent of liver fat accumulation is inversely proportional to habitual daily physical activity, both in type 2 diabetic and non-diabetic individuals [23]. But which comes first? Are individuals with fatty liver more prone to insulin resistance and weight gain, or do lifestyle factors initiate and underlie fatty liver?
Farmers are the supreme experts at the practical manipulation of nature. The production of fatty liver in ducks and geese has been honed over at least 2,500 years [24]. Currently, the birds are allowed increasing access to high-carbohydrate feed over a 12 week free-range period. During this phase, rapid weight gain occurs and the livers become fatty, enlarging to 50% of their final size. This is equivalent to severe fatty liver for man. In the final 12 days, gavage is used to administer a large, high-fat energy overload and exacerbate the hepatic fat excess. However, the first phase of fois gras production gives all the necessary clues to the genesis of fatty liver in man. Prolonged intake of energy in excess of requirement will bring about intra-hepatic triacylglycerol deposition.
The effect of modifying plasma insulin levels on fatty liver
As the predominant anabolic hormone of metabolism, insulin plays a major role in promoting the synthesis and storage of fatty acid/triacylglycerol. Under conditions of constant hyperinsulinaemia and a modest elevation of the plasma glucose level, fatty acid synthesis from glucose is accelerated [25]. The extent of portal hyperinsulinaemia will determine how much glucose is converted into fatty acid in the liver. This process will be significant when the 24 h energy intake exceeds expenditure over the same period [26, 27]. In groups of obese individuals, those with a higher plasma insulin level have markedly increased rates of de novo lipogenesis [26]. Newly synthesised triacylglycerol in the liver can be either oxidised, exported as VLDL or stored as hepatic triacylglycerol. As transport of fatty acid into mitochondria for oxidation is inhibited by malonyl-CoA, which is produced during lipogenesis [28], newly synthesised triacylglycerol is preferentially directed towards storage or export, thus increasing hepatic fat content and/or increasing the concentration of plasma VLDL triacylglycerol. From this biochemical perspective, increased insulin secretion in the presence of positive energy balance can explain the initiation of fatty liver. The process will be hastened in the presence of peripheral insulin resistance and hence higher plasma insulin levels.
The implication that the fatty liver in type 2 diabetes is not secondary to hyperglycaemia but is determined by portal hyperinsulinaemia can neatly be tested by examining the extent of fatty liver in type 1 diabetes. In this condition, hyperglycaemia coexists with portal insulin concentrations that are approximately 2.5-fold lower than normal, as there is no portal/peripheral gradient. Liver fat content in a group of 19 individuals with type 1 diabetes was reported to be one-third lower than that in matched controls [29]. This indicates that when the portal insulin concentration is low, liver fat content is low.
It is therefore important to examine the effect of decreasing insulin secretion. This may be achieved in four ways. First, hypoenergetic diets lead to lower insulin secretion rates, but in the context of negative energy balance it is not remarkable that liver fat content falls [30]. Second, increased physical activity increases muscle insulin sensitivity and decreases the plasma insulin level. The extent of habitual daily physical activity has been shown to be negatively correlated with the degree of hepatic steatosis, both in type 2 diabetic and non-diabetic groups [23], and this effect is additive to advice on weight loss [31]. Third, thiazolidinediones increase insulin sensitivity and decrease insulin secretion rates. These agents bring about a 54% decrease in liver fat content [32, 33]. Finally, use of subcutaneous insulin in type 2 diabetes brings about decreases in portal insulin delivery and liver fat [34].
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Taken together, the biochemical and clinical trial information points to endogenously secreted insulin as the major promoter of hepatic steatosis. There is no reason to believe that hyperglycaemia per se promotes fat deposition in the liver, although its secondary effect will play a role in impaired glucose tolerance and early type 2 diabetes via increased insulin secretion rates and, hence, increased liver fat.
Assembling the time-course to type 2 diabetes
It has long been known that subnormal insulin sensitivity is the best predictor of the risk of developing type 2 diabetes. Recent studies have emphasised the primacy of extrahepatic insulin resistance [35]. In such individuals, raised plasma insulin levels compensate in terms of plasma glucose control, but set the scene for enhanced lipogenesis in the liver. The best available information suggests that excess fat deposition in the liver is uniformly present before the onset of classical type 2 diabetes [22, 23, 36‐39]. Liver fat content is supra-normal in type 2 diabetes, with minimal crossover of range with normal individuals [23]. Such studies using magnetic resonance spectroscopy are able to quantify liver fat precisely, as are biopsy studies. A necessarily small biopsy series has shown all of a group of ten type 2 diabetic volunteers to have hepatic steatosis [40]. When ultrasound is used, only more severe degrees of steatosis are detected, and the prevalence of fatty liver will be underestimated. A large ultrasound-based study has shown 70% of people with type 2 diabetes to have fatty liver [39]. Nonetheless, even using ultrasound to classify individuals at baseline as either having or not having fatty liver, the prognostic power of predicting onset of type 2 diabetes within 8 years is impressive (Fig. 4) [36]. This study of 3,189 individuals with normal glucose tolerance at baseline showed a very low incidence of type 2 diabetes over 8 years if fatty liver had been excluded at baseline. Even when adjusted for age and BMI, the hazard ratio for diabetes was 5.5 (range 3.6–8.5).
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In support of this, Suzuki demonstrated a temporal progression from weight gain to raised levels of liver enzymes, to hypertriglyceridaemia and, eventually, glucose intolerance [41]. It must be noted that the association of raised liver enzyme concentrations with fatty liver is strong between groups with and without type 2 diabetes but not absolute for diabetic individuals, who may exhibit an increase within the normal range. In a group of 84 children with biopsy-confirmed non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, most were insulin resistant and 12% already had abnormal glucose tolerance [42]. Certainly, weight loss can slow or halt the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes. When a group of individuals with impaired glucose tolerance was followed over time, weight loss of only 1 kg decreased the incidence of diabetes by 20% [43].
The clearest prospective information of the time course to development of type 2 diabetes comes from the West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study [38]. In a large group of men followed for 2 years, 9% developed diabetes during the period of observation. Two years before the onset of type 2 diabetes, this subgroup was characterised by having elevated levels of plasma triacylglycerol and alanine aminotransferase (Fig. 5). There was a steady rise in the level of this liver enzyme in the run-up to the time of diagnosis, suggesting that the burden on the liver cells was steadily increasing. In contrast, although fasting plasma glucose concentration was marginally above that of the group who did not develop diabetes, it remained fairly constant until the few months immediately prior to the diagnosis of diabetes, when a rapid rise occurred. There was not a gradual decompensation with a linear increase in fasting plasma glucose, as is often assumed. In established type 2 diabetes, hepatic glucose production in everyday life remains relatively unsuppressed [44] and postprandial plasma insulin levels are elevated by approximately 2.5-fold [45].
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The difference in the time-course of change in pathogenic factors during the natural history of type 2 diabetes and during its reversal by bariatric surgery deserves comment (see text box: Steps in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes). Fatty liver becomes established years before the onset of type 2 diabetes. It appears necessary but not sufficient for its development. The subsequent period of years of over-exposure of the islets to an elevated plasma triacylglycerol level and a modest increase in the plasma glucose level is necessary to precipitate beta cell decompensation. Individuals are likely to exhibit different degrees of islet sensitivity in response to the adverse effects of these factors. However, in established diabetes, sudden mobilisation of the liver fat allows normal physiology to be reinstated within days, provided that long-term damage to the beta cells has not yet occurred. The published data suggest that 2–3 years of type 2 diabetes does not usually produce irreversible beta cell damage.
By assimilating the knowledge gained from studies of the reversal of type 2 diabetes into the prospective observation of the development of the condition a clear temporal pattern, the twin cycle hypothesis, can be described (Fig. 6). Energy imbalance allows the onset of fatty liver. Peripheral insulin resistance, either as a familial trait or as a result of lifestyle factors, will expedite this process because of hyperinsulinaemia. The increased liver fat brings about a degree of hepatic insulin resistance that involves failure to suppress fasting glucose production. The degree of hepatic steatosis will be exacerbated by the portal hyperinsulinaemia, and a raised plasma triacylglycerol level signals the presence of excess liver fat [46]. Exposure of the beta cells to excess fatty acids derived from circulating and locally deposited triacylglycerol suppresses glucose-mediated insulin secretion [17‐19].
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The twin vicious cycles then grind onwards. Raised intrahepatic triacylglycerol leads to decreased suppression of hepatic glucose output, which increases basal insulin secretion and further increases intrahepatic triacylglycerol. Separately but sequentially, supra-normal plasma glucose and fatty acid delivery causes decreased postprandial beta cell function and decreased glucose-responsive insulin secretion, leading to further excursions in plasma glucose. At a threshold determined by individual factors, beta cell decompensation occurs and the plasma glucose level rises relatively rapidly, leading to biochemical or symptomatic presentation of type 2 diabetes. Over several years of diabetes, the cumulative effects of excessive glucose and fatty acid exposure bring about a degree of impairment of beta cell function that is irreversible. There is continued decline for as long as the causative factors of energy overload and raised liver fat persist. At some point, insulin therapy is required for reasonable control of plasma glucose.
Conclusions
The essential time sequence of the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes is now evident. Muscle insulin resistance determines the rate at which fatty liver progresses, and ectopic fat deposition in the liver and islets underlies the related dynamic defects of hepatic insulin resistance and beta cell dysfunction. These defects are capable of dramatic reversal under hypoenergetic feeding conditions, completely in early diabetes and to a worthwhile extent in more established disease.
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It is now clear that we are dealing with an ecological phenomenon, the aetiology of which demonstrably lies in positive energy balance. Nowhere is this more clearly illustrated than in the Pima Indians, a population in which the prevalence of type 2 diabetes has risen from 0% to 40% over half a century, in step with a change from subsistence farming to inactivity and surplus food [47]. When our species finds itself living under conditions of exercise dearth and energy excess, the mechanisms that evolved over millennia to allow populations to withstand famines become maladaptive.
Two important questions emerge: Does the species have the ability to adjust its environment and avoid the primary causes of type 2 diabetes? What distinguishes those individuals who appear resistant to the metabolic challenge, remaining normoglycaemic in the face of little exercise and much eating?
Acknowledgements
This review is based on a lecture given by the author at the Diabetes UK Annual Professional Meeting, April 2008. The concepts were developed during research supported by Wellcome Programme Grant 073561.
Duality of interest
The author has received lecture or consultancy fees unconnected with this review from Merck Sharp and Dohme, Novartis, Eli Lilly, NovoNordisk, Takeda and Servier Laboratories.
Open Access
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
Open AccessThis is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0), which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
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