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We Know More Than We Can Tell About Diabetes and Vascular Disease: The 2016 Edwin Bierman Award Lecture.

Citation
Semenkovich, C. F. “We Know More Than We Can Tell About Diabetes And Vascular Disease: The 2016 Edwin Bierman Award Lecture.”. Diabetes, pp. 1735-1741.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Clay F Semenkovich
Abstract

Diabetes is a disorder of abnormal lipid metabolism, a notion strongly supported by the work of Edwin Bierman, for whom this eponymous lecture is named. This abnormal lipid environment continues to be associated with devastating vascular complications in diabetes despite current therapies, suggesting that our understanding of the pathophysiology of blood vessel disease in diabetes is limited. In this review, potential new insights into the nature of diabetic vasculopathy will be discussed. Recent observations suggest that while the concept of distinct macrovascular and microvascular complications of diabetes has been useful, vascular diseases in diabetes may be more interrelated than previously appreciated. Moreover, the intermediary metabolic pathway of de novo lipogenesis, which synthesizes lipids from simple precursors, is robustly sensitive to insulin and may contribute to these complications. De novo lipogenesis requires fatty acid synthase, and recent studies of this enzyme suggest that endogenously produced lipids are channeled to specific intracellular sites to affect physiology. These findings raise the possibility that novel approaches to treating diabetes and its complications could be based on altering the intracellular lipid milieu.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Diabetes
Volume
66
Issue
7
Number of Pages
1735-1741
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1939-327X
DOI
10.2337/db17-0093
Alternate Journal
Diabetes
PMID
28637825
PMCID
PMC5482089
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