Experimental Diabetes Research 
Volume 2008 (2008), Article ID 230458, 13 pages
doi:10.1155/2008/230458
Review Article

The Effects of C-peptide on Type 1 Diabetic Polyneuropathies and Encephalopathy in the BB/Wor-rat

Anders A. F. Sima,1,2 Weixian Zhang,1 Zhen-guo Li,1 and Hideki Kamiya1,3

1Department of Pathology, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48201, USA
2Department of Neurology, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48201, USA
3Department of Medicine, Nagoya University School of Medicine, Showa-Ku, Nagoya 466-8550, Japan

Received 7 June 2007; Accepted 7 January 2008

Recommended by Thomas Forst

Abstract

Diabetic polyneuropathy (DPN) occurs more frequently in type 1 diabetes resulting in a more severe DPN. The differences in DPN between the two types of diabetes are due to differences in the availability of insulin and C-peptide. Insulin and C-peptide provide gene regulatory effects on neurotrophic factors with effects on axonal cytoskeletal proteins and nerve fiber integrity. A significant abnormality in type 1 DPN is nodal degeneration. In the type 1 BB/Wor-rat, C-peptide replacement corrects metabolic abnormalities ameliorating the acute nerve conduction defect. It corrects abnormalities of neurotrophic factors and the expression of neuroskeletal proteins with improvements of axonal size and function. C-peptide corrects the expression of nodal adhesive molecules with prevention and repair of the functionally significant nodal degeneration. Cognitive dysfunction is a recognized complication of type 1 diabetes, and is associated with impaired neurotrophic support and apoptotic neuronal loss. C-peptide prevents hippocampal apoptosis and cognitive deficits. It is therefore clear that substitution of C-peptide in type 1 diabetes has a multitude of effects on DPN and cognitive dysfunction. Here the effects of C-peptide replenishment will be extensively described as they pertain to DPN and diabetic encephalopathy, underpinning its beneficial effects on neurological complications in type 1 diabetes.