Insulin resistance receptors was discovered

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On Apr. 1, 1976, physician and scientist C. Ronald Kahn from Harvard University announced he had discovered alterations in the receptors associated with insulin resistance, found in obesity and type 2 diabetes. The study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Studies of insulin receptors on circulating monocytes suggest that the insulin resistance in these patients was due to a marked decrease in insulin binding to its membrane receptors. When these patients were fasted, there was a fall in plasma insulin but no increase in insulin binding, suggesting that the receptor defect was not secondary to the hyperinsulinemia.

The clinical features shared by these cases and several similar ones previously reported may be divided into two unique clinical syndromes: Type A, a syndrome in younger females with signs of virilization or accelerated growth, in whom the receptor defect may be primary, and Type B, a syndrome in older females with signs of an immunologic disease, in whom circulating antibodies to the insulin receptor are found.

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Source: New England Journal of Medicine
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