Metabolic Syndrome and Robustness Tradeoffs
- 1 December 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 53 (suppl_3) , S6-S15
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.53.suppl_3.s6
Abstract
The metabolic syndrome is a highly complex breakdown of normal physiology characterized by obesity, insulin resistance, hyperlipidemia, and hypertension. Type 2 diabetes is a major manifestation of this syndrome, although increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) often precedes the onset of frank clinical diabetes. Prevention and cure for this disease constellation is of major importance to world health. Because the metabolic syndrome affects multiple interacting organ systems (i.e., it is a systemic disease), a systems-level analysis of disease evolution is essential for both complete elucidation of its pathophysiology and improved approaches to therapy. The goal of this review is to provide a perspective on systems-level approaches to metabolic syndrome, with particular emphasis on type 2 diabetes. We consider that metabolic syndromes take over inherent dynamics of our body that ensure robustness against unstable food supply and pathogenic infections, and lead to chronic inflammation that ultimately results in CVD. This exemplifies how trade-offs between robustness against common perturbations (unstable food and infections) and fragility against unusual perturbations (high–energy content foods and low–energy utilization lifestyle) is exploited to form chronic diseases. Possible therapeutic approaches that target fragility of emergent robustness of the disease state have been discussed. A detailed molecular interaction map for adipocyte, hepatocyte, skeletal muscle cell, and pancreatic β-cell cross-talk in the metabolic syndrome can be viewed at http://www.systems-biology.org/001/003.html.Keywords
This publication has 73 references indexed in Scilit:
- The systems biology markup language (SBML): a medium for representation and exchange of biochemical network modelsBioinformatics, 2003
- Inflammation in atherosclerosisNature, 2002
- Robustness as a Measure of Plausibility in Models of Biochemical NetworksJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2002
- Systems Biology: A Brief OverviewScience, 2002
- Insulin signalling and the regulation of glucose and lipid metabolismNature, 2001
- Global and societal implications of the diabetes epidemicNature, 2001
- Robust Oscillations within the Interlocked Feedback Model of Drosophila Circadian RhythmJournal of Theoretical Biology, 2001
- Tumour necrosis factor, a key role in obesity?FEBS Letters, 1999
- It’s a noisy business! Genetic regulation at the nanomolar scaleTrends in Genetics, 1999
- Adipose Expression of Tumor Necrosis Factor-α: Direct Role in Obesity-Linked Insulin ResistanceScience, 1993