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Increased advanced glycation endproducts, stiffness, and hardness in iliac crest bone from postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes mellitus on insulin.

Sashank LekkalaSara E SacherErik A TaylorRebecca M WilliamsKendall F MoseleyEve Donnelly
Published in: Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (2022)
Individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) have a greater risk of bone fracture compared to those with normal glucose tolerance (NGT). In contrast, individuals with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) have a lower or similar risk of fracture. Our objective was to understand how progressive glycemic derangement affects advanced glycation endproduct (AGE) content, composition and mechanical properties of iliac bone from postmenopausal women with NGT (n=35, age=65±7y, HbA1c=5.8%±0.3%), IGT (n=26, age=64±5y, HbA1c=6.0±0.4%), and T2DM on insulin (n=25, age=64±6y, HbA1c=9.1%±2.2%). AGEs were assessed in all samples using high performance liquid chromatography to measure pentosidine and in NGT/T2DM samples using multiphoton microscopy to spatially resolve the density of fluorescent AGEs (fAGEs). A subset of samples (n=14 NGT, n=14 T2DM) was analyzed with nanoindentation and Raman microscopy. Bone tissue from the T2DM group had greater concentrations of 1) pentosidine vs. IGT (cortical +24%, p=0.087; trabecular +35%, p=0.007) and vs. NGT (cortical +40%, p=0.003; trabecular +35%, p=0.004) and 2) fAGE crosslink density vs. NGT (cortical +71%, p<0.001; trabecular +44%, p<0.001). Bone pentosidine content in the IGT group was lower than in the T2DM group and did not differ from the NGT group, indicating that the greater AGE content observed in T2DM occurs with progressive diabetes. Individuals with T2DM on metformin had lower cortical bone pentosidine compared to individuals not on metformin (-35%, p=0.017). Cortical bone from the T2DM group was stiffer (+9%, p=0.021) and harder (+8%, p=0.039) vs. the NGT group. Bone tissue AGEs, which embrittle bone, increased with worsening glycemic control assessed by HbA1c (Pen: R 2 =0.28, p<0.001; fAGE density: R 2 =0.30, p<0.001). These relationships suggest a potential mechanism by which bone fragility may increase despite greater tissue stiffness and hardness in individuals with T2DM; our results suggest that it occurs in the transition from IGT to overt T2DM. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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