Abstract

To analyze the effect of vitamin D supplementation on the improvement of diabetes mellitus based on plasma proteomics. Five-week-old SPF spontaneously obese rats with type 2 diabetes were randomly divided into a diabetic group and a diabetic vitamin D intervention group, and the control group was Zucker lean rats. The fasting blood glucose of the rats in each group was compared with that of the diabetic vitamin D group, and the plasma proteins of the rats in each group were compared by quantitative analysis of the high-resolution mass spectrometry system iTRAQ, and KEGG signaling pathway analysis was performed. The fasting blood glucose of rats in the diabetic vitamin D intervention group was significantly lower than that of the diabetic group, and the proteins that were differentially expressed in the diabetic vitamin D intervention group were significantly improved. KEGG signaling pathway analysis revealed that the differential proteins in the diabetic group were mainly distributed among enzymes, exosomal proteins, and peptidases and inhibitors, and that the number of differences in these three classes of proteins was significantly reduced in the diabetic intervention group. Vitamin D supplementation can improve the differential expression of fasting glucose and plasma proteins in the diabetic rats.

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