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Lipid-Induced Insulin Resistance Affects Women Less Than Men and Is Not Accompanied by Inflammation or Impaired Proximal Insulin Signaling

OBJECTIVE: We have previously shown that overnight fasted women have higher insulin-stimulated whole body and leg glucose uptake despite a higher intramyocellular triacylglycerol concentration than men. Women also express higher muscle mRNA levels of proteins related to lipid metabolism than men. We...

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Autores principales: Høeg, Louise D., Sjøberg, Kim A., Jeppesen, Jacob, Jensen, Thomas E., Frøsig, Christian, Birk, Jesper B., Bisiani, Bruno, Hiscock, Natalie, Pilegaard, Henriette, Wojtaszewski, Jørgen F.P., Richter, Erik A., Kiens, Bente
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Diabetes Association 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3012198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20956497
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db10-0698
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author Høeg, Louise D.
Sjøberg, Kim A.
Jeppesen, Jacob
Jensen, Thomas E.
Frøsig, Christian
Birk, Jesper B.
Bisiani, Bruno
Hiscock, Natalie
Pilegaard, Henriette
Wojtaszewski, Jørgen F.P.
Richter, Erik A.
Kiens, Bente
author_facet Høeg, Louise D.
Sjøberg, Kim A.
Jeppesen, Jacob
Jensen, Thomas E.
Frøsig, Christian
Birk, Jesper B.
Bisiani, Bruno
Hiscock, Natalie
Pilegaard, Henriette
Wojtaszewski, Jørgen F.P.
Richter, Erik A.
Kiens, Bente
author_sort Høeg, Louise D.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: We have previously shown that overnight fasted women have higher insulin-stimulated whole body and leg glucose uptake despite a higher intramyocellular triacylglycerol concentration than men. Women also express higher muscle mRNA levels of proteins related to lipid metabolism than men. We therefore hypothesized that women would be less prone to lipid-induced insulin resistance. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Insulin sensitivity of whole-body and leg glucose disposal was studied in 16 young well-matched healthy men and women infused with intralipid or saline for 7 h. Muscle biopsies were obtained before and during a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp (1.42 mU · kg(−1) · min(−1)). RESULTS: Intralipid infusion reduced whole-body glucose infusion rate by 26% in women and 38% in men (P < 0.05), and insulin-stimulated leg glucose uptake was reduced significantly less in women (45%) than men (60%) after intralipid infusion. Hepatic glucose production was decreased during the clamp similarly in women and men irrespective of intralipid infusion. Intralipid did not impair insulin or AMPK signaling in muscle and subcutaneous fat, did not cause accumulation of muscle lipid intermediates, and did not impair insulin-stimulated glycogen synthase activity in muscle or increase plasma concentrations of inflammatory cytokines. In vitro glucose transport in giant sarcolemmal vesicles was not decreased by acute exposure to fatty acids. Leg lactate release was increased and respiratory exchange ratio was decreased by intralipid. CONCLUSIONS: Intralipid infusion causes less insulin resistance of muscle glucose uptake in women than in men. This insulin resistance is not due to decreased canonical insulin signaling, accumulation of lipid intermediates, inflammation, or direct inhibition of GLUT activity. Rather, a higher leg lactate release and lower glucose oxidation with intralipid infusion may suggest a metabolic feedback regulation of glucose metabolism.
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spelling pubmed-30121982012-01-01 Lipid-Induced Insulin Resistance Affects Women Less Than Men and Is Not Accompanied by Inflammation or Impaired Proximal Insulin Signaling Høeg, Louise D. Sjøberg, Kim A. Jeppesen, Jacob Jensen, Thomas E. Frøsig, Christian Birk, Jesper B. Bisiani, Bruno Hiscock, Natalie Pilegaard, Henriette Wojtaszewski, Jørgen F.P. Richter, Erik A. Kiens, Bente Diabetes Metabolism OBJECTIVE: We have previously shown that overnight fasted women have higher insulin-stimulated whole body and leg glucose uptake despite a higher intramyocellular triacylglycerol concentration than men. Women also express higher muscle mRNA levels of proteins related to lipid metabolism than men. We therefore hypothesized that women would be less prone to lipid-induced insulin resistance. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Insulin sensitivity of whole-body and leg glucose disposal was studied in 16 young well-matched healthy men and women infused with intralipid or saline for 7 h. Muscle biopsies were obtained before and during a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp (1.42 mU · kg(−1) · min(−1)). RESULTS: Intralipid infusion reduced whole-body glucose infusion rate by 26% in women and 38% in men (P < 0.05), and insulin-stimulated leg glucose uptake was reduced significantly less in women (45%) than men (60%) after intralipid infusion. Hepatic glucose production was decreased during the clamp similarly in women and men irrespective of intralipid infusion. Intralipid did not impair insulin or AMPK signaling in muscle and subcutaneous fat, did not cause accumulation of muscle lipid intermediates, and did not impair insulin-stimulated glycogen synthase activity in muscle or increase plasma concentrations of inflammatory cytokines. In vitro glucose transport in giant sarcolemmal vesicles was not decreased by acute exposure to fatty acids. Leg lactate release was increased and respiratory exchange ratio was decreased by intralipid. CONCLUSIONS: Intralipid infusion causes less insulin resistance of muscle glucose uptake in women than in men. This insulin resistance is not due to decreased canonical insulin signaling, accumulation of lipid intermediates, inflammation, or direct inhibition of GLUT activity. Rather, a higher leg lactate release and lower glucose oxidation with intralipid infusion may suggest a metabolic feedback regulation of glucose metabolism. American Diabetes Association 2011-01 2010-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3012198/ /pubmed/20956497 http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db10-0698 Text en © 2011 by the American Diabetes Association. Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.
spellingShingle Metabolism
Høeg, Louise D.
Sjøberg, Kim A.
Jeppesen, Jacob
Jensen, Thomas E.
Frøsig, Christian
Birk, Jesper B.
Bisiani, Bruno
Hiscock, Natalie
Pilegaard, Henriette
Wojtaszewski, Jørgen F.P.
Richter, Erik A.
Kiens, Bente
Lipid-Induced Insulin Resistance Affects Women Less Than Men and Is Not Accompanied by Inflammation or Impaired Proximal Insulin Signaling
title Lipid-Induced Insulin Resistance Affects Women Less Than Men and Is Not Accompanied by Inflammation or Impaired Proximal Insulin Signaling
title_full Lipid-Induced Insulin Resistance Affects Women Less Than Men and Is Not Accompanied by Inflammation or Impaired Proximal Insulin Signaling
title_fullStr Lipid-Induced Insulin Resistance Affects Women Less Than Men and Is Not Accompanied by Inflammation or Impaired Proximal Insulin Signaling
title_full_unstemmed Lipid-Induced Insulin Resistance Affects Women Less Than Men and Is Not Accompanied by Inflammation or Impaired Proximal Insulin Signaling
title_short Lipid-Induced Insulin Resistance Affects Women Less Than Men and Is Not Accompanied by Inflammation or Impaired Proximal Insulin Signaling
title_sort lipid-induced insulin resistance affects women less than men and is not accompanied by inflammation or impaired proximal insulin signaling
topic Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3012198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20956497
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db10-0698
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