782 research outputs found

    Hepatic steatosis does not cause insulin resistance in people with familial hypobetalipoproteinaemia

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    Item does not contain fulltextAIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Hepatic steatosis is strongly associated with hepatic and whole-body insulin resistance. It has proved difficult to determine whether hepatic steatosis itself is a direct cause of insulin resistance. In patients with familial hypobetalipoproteinaemia (FHBL), hepatic steatosis is a direct consequence of impaired hepatic VLDL excretion, independently of metabolic derangements. Thus, patients with FHBL provide a unique opportunity to investigate the relation between increased liver fat and insulin sensitivity. METHODS: We included seven male participants with FHBL and seven healthy matched controls. Intrahepatic triacylglycerol content and intramyocellular lipid content were measured using localised proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((1)H-MRS). A two-step hyperinsulinaemic-euglycaemic clamp, using stable isotopes, was assessed to determine hepatic and peripheral insulin sensitivity. RESULTS: (1)H-MRS showed moderate to severe hepatic steatosis in patients with FHBL. Basal endogenous glucose production (EGP) and glucose levels did not differ between the two groups, whereas insulin levels tended to be higher in patients compared with controls. Insulin-mediated suppression of EGP during lower dose insulin infusion and insulin-mediated peripheral glucose uptake during higher dose insulin infusion were comparable between FHBL participants and controls. Baseline fatty acids and lipolysis (glycerol turnover) at baseline and during the clamp did not differ between groups. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: In spite of moderate to severe hepatic steatosis, people with FHBL do not display a reduction in hepatic or peripheral insulin sensitivity compared with healthy matched controls. These results indicate that hepatic steatosis per se is not a causal factor leading to insulin resistance. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN35161775

    Exercise, muscle glycogen and insulin action

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    The aim of this thesis was to investigate the influence of muscle glycogen concentration on whole body insulin stimulated glucose uptake in humans and to examine the potential signalling mechanisms responsible for enhanced insulin action in the post exercise period. Untrained male subjects were conditioned to achieve a range of muscle glycogen concentrations via acute exercise or a combination of exercise and diet. The influence of muscle glycogen content on whole body insulin stimulated glucose uptake was determined via hyperinsulinaemic / euglycaemic clamps conducted at rest, 30 min after exercise or 24 hours after exercise. Muscle glycogen content did not influence insulin mediated glucose disposal either 30 min or 24 hrs after exercise when compared with basal. Conventional insulin signalling to muscle glucose uptake and signalling through the p38 MAPK cascade was also largely unaltered by glycogen concentration. Muscle glycogen synthesis was significantly increased in heavily but not moderately glycogen depleted muscle 30 min after exercise. Enhanced muscle glycogen synthesis occurred in line with a significant increase in insulin stimulated GSK-3 serine phosphorylation. This finding suggests that enhanced insulin sensitivity of muscle glycogen synthesis following glycogen depleting exercise may be mediated via a pathway involving alterations in insulin stimulated GSK-3 phosphorylation. In summary, whilst glycogen influences insulin mediated GSK-3 phosphorylation and glycogen synthesis, the findings of the present series of investigations suggest that the role of muscle glycogen in the process of insulin stimulated glucose uptake may not be as important as previously theorised

    Development of microdialysis methodology for interstitial insulin measurement in rodents.

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    INTRODUCTION: Accurate assessment of muscle insulin sensitivity requires measurement of insulin concentration in interstitial fluid (ISF), but has proved difficult. We aimed to optimise measurement of ISF insulin concentrations in rat muscles in vivo using microdialysis. METHODS: Factorial experimental design experiments were performed in vitro to determine optimal conditions for insulin recovery with microdialysis probes. These conditions were tested in vivo, adjusted appropriately and used in lean and obese Zucker rats to compare ISF insulin concentrations basally and during hyperinsulinaemic-euglycaemic (HE) clamp. RESULTS: Optimal conditions in vivo were: a 100kDa microdialysis probe inserted in muscle, perfused with 1% BSA, 1.5mM glucose in 0.9% sodium chloride at 1μl/min. Samples were collected into siliconised glass microvials. As a reference for insulin, we established a protocol of inulin infusion, beginning at -80min and reaching equilibrium within 60min. HE clamp, beginning at 0min, increased ISF insulin concentration from 122±56 basally to 429±180pmol/l (P<0.05) in lean rats and from 643±165 to 1087±243pmol/l (P=0.07) in obese rats; ISF insulin concentrations were significantly higher throughout in obese rats. The difference between ISF and plasma insulin concentration (ISF:plasma ratio) was substantially higher in obese rats, but fell to similar values in obese and lean rats during HE clamp. DISCUSSION: Optimising insulin recovery with microdialysis allowed accurate measurement of basal ISF insulin in muscle of lean and obese Zucker rats and indicates insulin transport across capillaries is impaired in obese rats, basally and during hyperinsulinaemia

    Bariatric surgery in morbidly obese insulin resistant humans normalises insulin signalling but not insulin-stimulated glucose disposal.

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    This is the final published version. Available from PLoS via the DOI in this record.All relevant data are available from Figshare, under the DOI http://dx.doi. org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1292883.AIMS: Weight-loss after bariatric surgery improves insulin sensitivity, but the underlying molecular mechanism is not clear. To ascertain the effect of bariatric surgery on insulin signalling, we examined glucose disposal and Akt activation in morbidly obese volunteers before and after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery (RYGB), and compared this to lean volunteers. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp, at five infusion rates, was used to determine glucose disposal rates (GDR) in eight morbidly obese (body mass index, BMI=47.3 ± 2.2 kg/m(2)) patients, before and after RYGB, and in eight lean volunteers (BMI=20.7 ± 0.7 kg/m2). Biopsies of brachioradialis muscle, taken at fasting and insulin concentrations that induced half-maximal (GDR50) and maximal (GDR100) GDR in each subject, were used to examine the phosphorylation of Akt-Thr308, Akt-473, and pras40, in vivo biomarkers for Akt activity. RESULTS: Pre-operatively, insulin-stimulated GDR was lower in the obese compared to the lean individuals (P<0.001). Weight-loss of 29.9 ± 4 kg after surgery significantly improved GDR50 (P=0.004) but not GDR100 (P=0.3). These subjects still remained significantly more insulin resistant than the lean individuals (p<0.001). Weight loss increased insulin-stimulated skeletal muscle Akt-Thr308 and Akt-Ser473 phosphorylation, P=0.02 and P=0.03 respectively (MANCOVA), and Akt activity towards the substrate PRAS40 (P=0.003, MANCOVA), and in contrast to GDR, were fully normalised after the surgery (obese vs lean, P=0.6, P=0.35, P=0.46, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Our data show that although Akt activity substantially improved after surgery, it did not lead to a full restoration of insulin-stimulated glucose disposal. This suggests that a major defect downstream of, or parallel to, Akt signalling remains after significant weight-loss.Diabetes Research and Wellness FoundatioMedical Research Council (MRC)Astra Zenec

    Altered myocardial substrate metabolism is associated with myocardial dysfunction in early diabetic cardiomyopathy in rats: studies using positron emission tomography

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    0.05). CONCLUSION: Using PET and echocardiography, we found increases in myocardial FA oxidation with a concomitant decrease of insulin-mediated myocardial glucose utilisation in early DCM. In addition, the latter was associated with impaired myocardial function. These in vivo data expand previous in vitro findings showing that early alterations in myocardial substrate metabolism contribute to myocardial dysfunctio

    Impaired postprandial skeletal muscle vascular responses to a mixed meal challenge in normoglycaemic people with a parent with type 2 diabetes

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    Aims/hypothesis: Microvascular blood flow (MBF) increases in skeletal muscle postprandially to aid in glucose delivery and uptake in muscle. This vascular action is impaired in individuals who are obese or have type 2 diabetes. Whether MBF is impaired in normoglycaemic people at risk of type 2 diabetes is unknown. We aimed to determine whether apparently healthy people at risk of type 2 diabetes display impaired skeletal muscle microvascular responses to a mixed-nutrient meal. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, participants with no family history of type 2 diabetes (FH-) for two generations (n = 18), participants with a positive family history of type 2 diabetes (FH+; i.e. a parent with type 2 diabetes; n = 16) and those with type 2 diabetes (n = 12) underwent a mixed meal challenge (MMC). Metabolic responses (blood glucose, plasma insulin and indirect calorimetry) were measured before and during the MMC. Skeletal muscle large artery haemodynamics (2D and Doppler ultrasound, and Mobil-O-graph) and microvascular responses (contrast-enhanced ultrasound) were measured at baseline and 1 h post MMC. Results: Despite normal blood glucose concentrations, FH+ individuals displayed impaired metabolic flexibility (reduced ability to switch from fat to carbohydrate oxidation vs FH-; p \u3c 0.05) during the MMC. The MMC increased forearm muscle microvascular blood volume in both the FH- (1.3-fold, p \u3c 0.01) and FH+ (1.3-fold, p \u3c 0.05) groups but not in participants with type 2 diabetes. However, the MMC increased MBF (1.9-fold, p \u3c 0.01), brachial artery diameter (1.1-fold, p \u3c 0.01) and brachial artery blood flow (1.7-fold, p \u3c 0.001) and reduced vascular resistance (0.7-fold, p \u3c 0.001) only in FH- participants, with these changes being absent in FH+ and type 2 diabetes. Participants with type 2 diabetes displayed significantly higher vascular stiffness (p \u3c 0.001) compared with those in the FH- and FH+ groups; however, vascular stiffness did not change during the MMC in any participant group. Conclusions/interpretation: Normoglycaemic FH+ participants display impaired postprandial skeletal muscle macro- and microvascular responses, suggesting that poor vascular responses to a meal may contribute to their increased risk of type 2 diabetes. We conclude that vascular insulin resistance may be an early precursor to type 2 diabetes in humans, which can be revealed using an MMC

    In vivo insulin action and resistance. The hyperinsulinaemic, euglycaemic clamp technique in conscious rats

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    After almost 75 years of research and four Nobel prizes awarded for insulin-related investigations, we still do not understand how insulin works. Of course, substantial progress has been made and there are some clues. We review in vivo insulin action from the moment of insulin biosynthesis in the pancreatic β-cell to insulin action on effector systems in target tissues. The mechanism of insulin action at the whole body, tissue and cellular level is discussed. In addition, factors and conditions influencing insulin action and events leading to insulin resistance are summarized. Finally, the reader is introduced into the principles of the hyperinsulinaemic, euglycaemic clamp technique which is considered the "golden standard" for measurement of insulin action and resistance in vivo. An example is given how to clamp conscious rats in a proper way.Biomedical Reviews 1996; 5: 31-45
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