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Publication : Glucose-free/high-protein diet improves hepatomegaly and exercise intolerance in glycogen storage disease type III mice.

First Author  Pagliarani S Year  2018
Journal  Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis Volume  1864
Issue  10 Pages  3407-3417
PubMed ID  30076962 Mgi Jnum  J:270172
Mgi Id  MGI:6277252 Doi  10.1016/j.bbadis.2018.07.031
Citation  Pagliarani S, et al. (2018) Glucose-free/high-protein diet improves hepatomegaly and exercise intolerance in glycogen storage disease type III mice. Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis 1864(10):3407-3417
abstractText  Glycogen disease type III (GSDIII), a rare incurable autosomal recessive disorder due to glycogen debranching enzyme deficiency, presents with liver, heart and skeletal muscle impairment, hepatomegaly and ketotic hypoglycemia. Muscle weakness usually worsens to fixed myopathy and cardiac involvement may present in about half of the patients during disease. Management relies on careful follow-up of symptoms and diet. No common agreement was reached on sugar restriction and treatment in adulthood. We administered two dietary regimens differing in their protein and carbohydrate content, high-protein (HPD) and high-protein/glucose-free (GFD), to our mouse model of GSDIII, starting at one month of age. Mice were monitored, either by histological, biochemical and molecular analysis and motor functional tests, until 10months of age. GFD ameliorated muscle performance up to 10months of age, while HPD showed little improvement only in young mice. In GFD mice, a decreased muscle glycogen content and fiber vacuolization was observed, even in aged animals indicating a protective role of proteins against skeletal muscle degeneration, at least in some districts. Hepatomegaly was reduced by about 20%. Moreover, the long-term administration of GFD did not worsen serum parameters even after eight months of high-protein diet. A decreased phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase activities and an increased expression of Krebs cycle and gluconeogenesis genes were seen in the liver of GFD fed mice. Our data show that the concurrent use of proteins and a strictly controlled glucose supply could reduce muscle wasting, and indicate a better metabolic control in mice with a glucose-free/high-protein diet.
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