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Journal of Endocrinology (2008) 199, 21-32       DOI: 10.1677/JOE-07-0588
© 2008 Society for Endocrinology
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Obesity and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in Swiss-Webster mice associated with late-onset hepatocellular carcinoma

Laura B Lemke1, Arlin B Rogers1, Prashant R Nambiar1 and James G Fox1,2

1 , Division of Comparative Medicine2 Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Building 16-820, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA

(Correspondence should be addressed to L B Lemke at Animal Resources Center, University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station, A2500, Austin, TX 78712-0136, USA; Email: llemke{at}mail.utexas.edu)

Genetic mutations resulting in obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) are described for both inbred and outbred mice. However, no known mouse model completely recapitulates human T2D and its comorbidities. We identified a cohort of obese, male, outbred Swiss-Webster (SW) mice as polyuric, polydipsic, glucosuric, and hyperglycemic. Prevalence of glucosuria in the SW colony reached 60% (n=70) in males 8 weeks to 6 months of age. Despite severe obesity in some females, no females were diabetic. Pathologic findings in affected males included cachexia, dilated gastrointestinal tracts with poor muscular tone, pancreatic islet degeneration and atrophy with compensatory metaplasia and/or neogenesis, bacterial pyelonephritis, membranous glomerulopathy, and late-onset hepatic tumors with macrosteatosis, microsteatosis, and hydropic change in aged males. Serum insulin correlated with blood glucose in a nonlinear pattern, suggestive of islet exhaustion. Circulating leptin levels showed a weak inverse correlation with glucose. Diabetic males were bred with obese colony females to produce 20 male and 20 female offspring. Prevalence of diabetes in male offspring was 80% (16/20) with a median age of onset of 18 weeks. By contrast, no diabetic females were identified, despite being significantly more obese than males. Male predominance is likewise a feature of T2D in humans. To our knowledge, this is the first documentation of hepatocellular carcinoma and islet metaplasia and/or neogenesis in a spontaneous outbred mouse model of T2D. The SW availability and histopathologic features represent a promising new model for the study of T2D.







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