Osteocalcin Is Related to Enhanced Insulin Secretion in Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
- Yvonne Winhofer, MD1,
- Ammon Handisurya, MD1,
- Andrea Tura, PHD2,
- Christina Bittighofer1,
- Katharina Klein, MD3,
- Barbara Schneider, PHD4,
- Christian Bieglmayer, MD5,
- Oswald F. Wagner, MD5,
- Giovanni Pacini, DSC2,
- Anton Luger, MD1 and
- Alexandra Kautzky-Willer, MD1
- 1Department of Internal Medicine III, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;
- 2Metabolic Unit, Institute of Biomedical Engineering, National Research Council, Padova, Italy;
- 3Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;
- 4Institute of Medical Statistics, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;
- 5Clinical Institute for Medical and Chemical Laboratory Diagnostic, General Hospital of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
- Corresponding author: Alexandra Kautzky-Willer, alexandra.kautzky-willer{at}meduniwien.ac.at.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE There is growing evidence that osteocalcin, an osteoblast-derived protein locally acting on bone formation, can increase insulin secretion as well as insulin sensitivity and thus prevent the development of obesity and diabetes in experimental animals. In humans, osteocalcin has been reported to be decreased in patients with type 2 diabetes. Because gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) can serve as a model of pre–type 2 diabetes, the aim of this study was to investigate osteocalcin in GDM.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Osteocalcin measurement and an oral glucose tolerance test were performed in 78 pregnant women (26 women had GDM and 52 women had normal glucose tolerance [NGT] during pregnancy; women were matched for age and BMI) and in 34 women postpartum.
RESULTS During pregnancy osteocalcin was significantly higher in the women with GDM than in the women with NGT (15.6 ± 6.4 vs. 12.6 ± 4.0 ng/ml; P < 0.015), whereas no difference was observed between the two groups at 12 weeks postpartum (36.2 ± 10.2 vs. 36.2 ± 13.0 ng/ml), when osteocalcin was found to be increased compared with the level in the pregnant state in all women (+145 ± 102% in GDM vs. +187 ± 119% in NGT; P < 0.0001). Moreover, osteocalcin showed a significant correlation with basal and total insulin secretion in the whole study group (R = 0.3, P < 0.01).
CONCLUSIONS In GDM osteocalcin was higher and thus less restrained than in women with NGT during pregnancy and furthermore correlated with insulin secretion parameters. Therefore, it could be hypothesized that osteocalcin can enhance insulin secretion in insulin-resistant states; alternatively an effect of hyperinsulinemia on osteocalcin secretion cannot be excluded.
Footnotes
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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- Received July 7, 2009.
- Accepted September 9, 2009.
- © 2010 by the American Diabetes Association.











