52 research outputs found

    Mapping Endocrine Networks by Stable Isotope Tracing

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    Collagen 24 Ī±1 Is Increased in Insulin-Resistant Skeletal Muscle and Adipose Tissue

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    Aberrant extracellular matrix (ECM) remodelling in muscle, liver and adipose tissue is a key characteristic of obesity and insulin resistance. Despite its emerging importance, the effective ECM targets remain largely undefined due to limitations of current approaches. Here, we developed a novel ECM-specific mass spectrometry-based proteomics technique to characterise the global view of the ECM changes in the skeletal muscle and liver of mice after high fat (HF) diet feeding. We identified distinct signatures of HF-induced protein changes between skeletal muscle and liver where the ECM remodelling was more prominent in the muscle than liver. In particular, most muscle collagen isoforms were increased by HF diet feeding whereas the liver collagens were differentially but moderately affected highlighting a different role of the ECM remodelling in different tissues of obesity. Moreover, we identified a novel association between collagen 24α1 and insulin resistance in the skeletal muscle. Using quantitative gene expression analysis, we extended this association to the white adipose tissue. Importantly, collagen 24α1 mRNA was increased in the visceral adipose tissue, but not the subcutaneous adipose tissue of obese diabetic subjects compared to lean controls, implying a potential pathogenic role of collagen 24α1 in obesity and type 2 diabetes

    Increased Whole-Body and Sustained Liver Cortisol Regeneration by 11Ī²-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 1 in Obese Men With Type 2 Diabetes Provides a Target for Enzyme Inhibition

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    OBJECTIVE The cortisol-regenerating enzyme 11Ī²-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11Ī²-HSD1) amplifies glucocorticoid levels in liver and adipose tissue. 11Ī²-HSD1 inhibitors are being developed to treat type 2 diabetes. In obesity, 11Ī²-HSD1 is increased in adipose tissue but decreased in liver. The benefits of pharmacological inhibition may be reduced if hepatic 11Ī²-HSD1 is similarly decreased in obese patients with type 2 diabetes. To examine this, we quantified in vivo whole-body, splanchnic, and hepatic 11Ī²-HSD1 activity in obese type 2 diabetic subjects. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Ten obese men with type 2 diabetes and seven normal-weight control subjects were infused with 9,11,12,12-[2H]4cortisol (40%) and cortisol (60%) at 1.74 mg/h. Adrenal cortisol secretion was suppressed with dexamethasone. Samples were obtained from the hepatic vein and an arterialized hand vein at steady state and after oral administration of cortisone (5 mg) to estimate whole-body and liver 11Ī²-HSD1 activity using tracer dilution. RESULTS In obese type 2 diabetic subjects, the appearance rate of 9,12,12-[2H]3cortisol in arterialized blood was increased (35 Ā± 2 vs. 29 Ā± 1 nmol/min, P &amp;lt; 0.05), splanchnic 9,12,12-[2H]3cortisol production was not reduced (29 Ā± 6 vs. 29 Ā± 6 nmol/min), and cortisol appearance in the hepatic vein after oral cortisone was unchanged. CONCLUSIONS Whole-body 11Ī²-HSD1 activity is increased in obese men with type 2 diabetes, whereas liver 11Ī²-HSD1 activity is sustained, unlike in euglycemic obesity. This supports the concept that inhibitors of 11Ī²-HSD1 are likely to be most effective in obese type 2 diabetic subjects. </jats:sec

    Effects of Proportions of Dietary Macronutrients on Glucocorticoid Metabolism in Diet-Induced Obesity in Rats

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    Tissue glucocorticoid levels in the liver and adipose tissue are regulated by regeneration of inactive glucocorticoid by 11Ī²-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11Ī²-HSD1) and inactivation by 5Ī±- and 5Ī²-reductases. A low carbohydrate diet increases hepatic 11Ī²-HSD1 and reduces glucocorticoid metabolism during weight loss in obese humans. We hypothesized that similar variations in macronutrient proportions regulate glucocorticoid metabolism in obese rats. Male Lister Hooded rats were fed an obesity-inducing ad libitum ā€˜Westernā€™ diet (37% fat, nā€Š=ā€Š36) for 22 weeks, then randomised to continue this diet (nā€Š=ā€Š12) or to switch to either a low carbohydrate (nā€Š=ā€Š12) or a moderate carbohydrate (nā€Š=ā€Š12) diet for the final 8 weeks. A parallel lean control group were fed an ad libitum control diet (10% fat, nā€Š=ā€Š12) throughout. The low and moderate carbohydrate diets decreased hepatic 11Ī²-HSD1 mRNA compared with the Western diet (both 0.7Ā±0.0 vs 0.9Ā±0.1 AU; p<0.01), but did not alter 11Ī²-HSD1 in adipose tissue. 5Ī±-Reductase mRNA was increased on the low carbohydrate compared with the moderate carbohydrate diet. Compared with lean controls, the Western diet decreased 11Ī²-HSD1 activity (1.6Ā±0.1 vs 2.8Ā±0.1 nmol/mcg protein/hr; p<0.001) and increased 5Ī±-reductase and 5Ī²-reductase mRNAs (1.9Ā±0.3 vs 1.0Ā±0.2 and 1.6Ā±0.1 vs 1.0Ā±0.1 AU respectively; p<0.01) in the liver, and reduced 11Ī²-HSD1 mRNA and activity (both p<0.01) in adipose tissue. Although an obesity-inducing high fat diet in rats recapitulates the abnormal glucocorticoid metabolism associated with human obesity in liver (but not in adipose tissue), a low carbohydrate diet does not increase hepatic 11Ī²-HSD1 in obese rats as occurs in humans
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