Understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates

Background: The increase in global prevalence of obesity and diabetes, and the growth of the elderly population worldwide emphasize the biomedical research need for an animal model which exhibits close similarity to human disease and aging processes. The rhesus monkey develops obesity and type 2 d...

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Main Authors: Tigno, Xenia T., Shi Ying Ding, Erwin, Joseph M., Aslam, Sadaf, Hansen, Barbara C.
Other Authors: University of South Florida. College of Medicine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Chulalongkorn University 2011
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Online Access:http://cuir.car.chula.ac.th/handle/123456789/14574
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Institution: Chulalongkorn University
Language: English
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spelling th-cuir.145742011-01-26T02:45:47Z Understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates Tigno, Xenia T. Shi Ying Ding Erwin, Joseph M. Aslam, Sadaf Hansen, Barbara C. University of South Florida. College of Medicine University of Maryland. School of Medicine Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine University of South Florida. College of Medicine University of South Florida. College of Medicine Metabolic syndrome Aging Diabetes Obesity Rhesus monkey Nonhuman primates Background: The increase in global prevalence of obesity and diabetes, and the growth of the elderly population worldwide emphasize the biomedical research need for an animal model which exhibits close similarity to human disease and aging processes. The rhesus monkey develops obesity and type 2 diabetes spontaneously and naturally when ad libitum fed, within a lifespan which is about a third that of the human. Objective: To characterize the genetic, structural, biochemical and physiological changes occurring in monkeys who age successfully and in those who develop obesity and type 2 diabetes. Results: The rhesus monkey demonstrates the same signs and symptoms of type 2 diabetes, including macroand microvascular complications, as observed in humans. Age-related changes, potential biomarkers, and proposed biochemical pathways of aging can be readily investigated, with outcomes very similar to those in humans. Conclusion: The rhesus monkey model imparts valuable insights to normal and pathological processes accompanying aging and type 2 diabetes. It also provides a valuable tool by which to test novel therapeutic interventions which otherwise can not be performed in humans due to ethical considerations, but where results are highly translatable. 2011-01-26T02:45:46Z 2011-01-26T02:45:46Z 2007 Article Asian biomedicine : research, reviews and news. 1,4(December 2007): 359-376 1905-7415 http://cuir.car.chula.ac.th/handle/123456789/14574 en Chulalongkorn University 584648 bytes application/pdf application/pdf Chulalongkorn University
institution Chulalongkorn University
building Chulalongkorn University Library
country Thailand
collection Chulalongkorn University Intellectual Repository
language English
topic Metabolic syndrome
Aging
Diabetes
Obesity
Rhesus monkey
Nonhuman primates
spellingShingle Metabolic syndrome
Aging
Diabetes
Obesity
Rhesus monkey
Nonhuman primates
Tigno, Xenia T.
Shi Ying Ding
Erwin, Joseph M.
Aslam, Sadaf
Hansen, Barbara C.
Understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates
description Background: The increase in global prevalence of obesity and diabetes, and the growth of the elderly population worldwide emphasize the biomedical research need for an animal model which exhibits close similarity to human disease and aging processes. The rhesus monkey develops obesity and type 2 diabetes spontaneously and naturally when ad libitum fed, within a lifespan which is about a third that of the human. Objective: To characterize the genetic, structural, biochemical and physiological changes occurring in monkeys who age successfully and in those who develop obesity and type 2 diabetes. Results: The rhesus monkey demonstrates the same signs and symptoms of type 2 diabetes, including macroand microvascular complications, as observed in humans. Age-related changes, potential biomarkers, and proposed biochemical pathways of aging can be readily investigated, with outcomes very similar to those in humans. Conclusion: The rhesus monkey model imparts valuable insights to normal and pathological processes accompanying aging and type 2 diabetes. It also provides a valuable tool by which to test novel therapeutic interventions which otherwise can not be performed in humans due to ethical considerations, but where results are highly translatable.
author2 University of South Florida. College of Medicine
author_facet University of South Florida. College of Medicine
Tigno, Xenia T.
Shi Ying Ding
Erwin, Joseph M.
Aslam, Sadaf
Hansen, Barbara C.
format Article
author Tigno, Xenia T.
Shi Ying Ding
Erwin, Joseph M.
Aslam, Sadaf
Hansen, Barbara C.
author_sort Tigno, Xenia T.
title Understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates
title_short Understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates
title_full Understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates
title_fullStr Understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates
title_full_unstemmed Understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates
title_sort understanding type 2 diabetes and aging : lessons from nonhuman primates
publisher Chulalongkorn University
publishDate 2011
url http://cuir.car.chula.ac.th/handle/123456789/14574
_version_ 1681411286437462016