Insulin Sensitivity Better in Women Than Men Thanks to PTEN Protein

It’s long been known that obese men are more likely to develop type two diabetes than obese women. Find out how a certain protein, known as PTEN, makes women less likely to develop Type 2 diabetes than men.

Researchers at McMaster University have discovered the difference in how obese men and women develop Type 2 diabetes may be related to the activity of a protein in the muscle.

As people become overweight, their skeletal muscle develops insulin resistance that can lead to type two diabetes. In a paper published by Scientific Reports today (2015-3-18), the research team found the activity of this protein, called PTEN (for Phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10), is different between men and women.

When PTEN is active, it prevents insulin from signaling properly in muscle, which reduces the amount of sugar a muscle takes. This ‘muscle insulin resistance’ increases the chance of developing type two diabetes.

“In our study, women’s muscle appeared more efficient in neutralizing this protein, and this allows insulin to work better to move sugar from circulation to muscle,” said lead author Dr. M. Constantine Samaan, assistant professor of pediatrics at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine and pediatric endocrinologist at the McMaster Children’s Hospital

“This protein is one explanation of why women are relatively protected from type two diabetes, despite having more body fat content compared to men at a given weight,” said Samaan, adding that this is important as it provides a therapeutic target to improve muscle responses to insulin to treat and prevent diabetes. The team is now working on finding out how PTEN is regulated in different cells.

The research was funded by the Canadian Heart & Stroke Foundation and Hamilton Health Sciences.

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Source: McMaster University

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