Experimental Diabetes Research 
Volume 2008 (2008), Article ID 385108, 5 pages
doi:10.1155/2008/385108
Review Article

C-Peptide and Atherogenesis: C-Peptide as a Mediator of Lesion Development in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus?

Nikolaus Marx and Daniel Walcher

Department of Internal Medicine II—Cardiology, University of Ulm, Ulm 89073, Germany

Received 1 November 2007; Accepted 28 January 2008

Recommended by Thomas Forst

Abstract

Patients with insulin resistance and early type 2 diabetes exhibit an increased propensity to develop a diffuse and extensive pattern of arteriosclerosis. Typically, these patients show increased levels of C-peptide and over the last years various groups examined the effect of C-peptide in vascular cells as well as its potential role in lesion development. While some studies demonstrated beneficial effects of C-peptide, for example, by showing an inhibition of smooth muscle cell proliferation, others suggested proatherogenic mechanisms in patients with type 2 diabetes. Among them, C-peptide may facilitate the recruitment of inflammatory cells into early lesions and promote lesion progression by inducing smooth muscle cell proliferation. The following review will summarize the effects of C-peptide in vascular cells and discuss the potential role of C-peptide in atherogenesis in patients with type 2 diabetes.