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Relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women

BACKGROUND: Although obesity is commonly linked with metabolic disease risk, some obese adults do not develop metabolic abnormalities, such as insulin resistance. OBJECTIVES: The primary aim of this study was to determine whether alterations in fatty acid mobilization and uptake underlie differences...

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Autores principales: Van Pelt, Douglas W., Newsom, Sean A., Schenk, Simon, Horowitz, Jeffrey F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4216778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24785103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2014.70
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author Van Pelt, Douglas W.
Newsom, Sean A.
Schenk, Simon
Horowitz, Jeffrey F.
author_facet Van Pelt, Douglas W.
Newsom, Sean A.
Schenk, Simon
Horowitz, Jeffrey F.
author_sort Van Pelt, Douglas W.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although obesity is commonly linked with metabolic disease risk, some obese adults do not develop metabolic abnormalities, such as insulin resistance. OBJECTIVES: The primary aim of this study was to determine whether alterations in fatty acid mobilization and uptake underlie differences in insulin sensitivity (S(i)) among a seemingly homogeneous cohort of obese women. METHODS: Insulin sensitivity (FSIVGTT), basal fatty acid rate of disappearance from plasma (Rd), resting whole-body fat oxidation, intramyocellular triacylglycerol (IMTG) concentration, and markers of skeletal muscle inflammation were measured in 21 obese women. Participants were divided into tertiles based on their S(i). The subset of participants with the lowest S(i) (LOW-S(i); S(i) ≤2.1 (mU/L)(−1)·min(−1); n=7) was compared with the subset of participants with the highest S(i), who exhibited relatively normal insulin sensitivity (NORM-S(i); S(i) ≥3.4 (mU/L)(−1)·min(−1); n=8). RESULTS: Despite nearly identical physical characteristics in LOW-S(i) vs. NORM-S(i) (BMI: 34±2 vs. 34±1 kg/m(2); %body fat: 48±1% vs. 47±1%; waist circumference: 104±2 vs. 104±2 cm; VO(2)max: 2.2±0.2 vs. 2.3±0.1 L/min), fatty acid Rd was nearly 30% lower in NORM (P=0.02). Importantly, the greater rate of fatty acid uptake in LOW-S(i) vs. NORMS(i) did not translate to higher rate of fat oxidation (3.5±0.2 vs. 3.7±0.2 μmol/kg/min) or to a measureable difference in IMTG content, (68.3±12.7 vs. 63.7±6.7 μmol/g dry weight). In conjunction with the lower fatty acid Rd in NORM-S(i) vs. LOW-S(i), activation of inflammatory pathways known to impair insulin action in skeletal muscle was also lower (i.e. lower phosphorylated JNK, higher IκBα abundance). In contrast, LOW-S(i) and NORM-S(i) exhibited no differences in plasma markers of inflammation (i.e. TNFα, IL-6, MCP-1). CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that obese women who maintain a relatively low rate of endogenous fatty acid uptake may be somewhat “protected” against the development of insulin resistance potentially by less activation of inflammatory pathways within skeletal muscle.
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spelling pubmed-42167782015-07-01 Relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women Van Pelt, Douglas W. Newsom, Sean A. Schenk, Simon Horowitz, Jeffrey F. Int J Obes (Lond) Article BACKGROUND: Although obesity is commonly linked with metabolic disease risk, some obese adults do not develop metabolic abnormalities, such as insulin resistance. OBJECTIVES: The primary aim of this study was to determine whether alterations in fatty acid mobilization and uptake underlie differences in insulin sensitivity (S(i)) among a seemingly homogeneous cohort of obese women. METHODS: Insulin sensitivity (FSIVGTT), basal fatty acid rate of disappearance from plasma (Rd), resting whole-body fat oxidation, intramyocellular triacylglycerol (IMTG) concentration, and markers of skeletal muscle inflammation were measured in 21 obese women. Participants were divided into tertiles based on their S(i). The subset of participants with the lowest S(i) (LOW-S(i); S(i) ≤2.1 (mU/L)(−1)·min(−1); n=7) was compared with the subset of participants with the highest S(i), who exhibited relatively normal insulin sensitivity (NORM-S(i); S(i) ≥3.4 (mU/L)(−1)·min(−1); n=8). RESULTS: Despite nearly identical physical characteristics in LOW-S(i) vs. NORM-S(i) (BMI: 34±2 vs. 34±1 kg/m(2); %body fat: 48±1% vs. 47±1%; waist circumference: 104±2 vs. 104±2 cm; VO(2)max: 2.2±0.2 vs. 2.3±0.1 L/min), fatty acid Rd was nearly 30% lower in NORM (P=0.02). Importantly, the greater rate of fatty acid uptake in LOW-S(i) vs. NORMS(i) did not translate to higher rate of fat oxidation (3.5±0.2 vs. 3.7±0.2 μmol/kg/min) or to a measureable difference in IMTG content, (68.3±12.7 vs. 63.7±6.7 μmol/g dry weight). In conjunction with the lower fatty acid Rd in NORM-S(i) vs. LOW-S(i), activation of inflammatory pathways known to impair insulin action in skeletal muscle was also lower (i.e. lower phosphorylated JNK, higher IκBα abundance). In contrast, LOW-S(i) and NORM-S(i) exhibited no differences in plasma markers of inflammation (i.e. TNFα, IL-6, MCP-1). CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that obese women who maintain a relatively low rate of endogenous fatty acid uptake may be somewhat “protected” against the development of insulin resistance potentially by less activation of inflammatory pathways within skeletal muscle. 2014-05-02 2015-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4216778/ /pubmed/24785103 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2014.70 Text en http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Van Pelt, Douglas W.
Newsom, Sean A.
Schenk, Simon
Horowitz, Jeffrey F.
Relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women
title Relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women
title_full Relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women
title_fullStr Relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women
title_full_unstemmed Relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women
title_short Relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women
title_sort relatively low endogenous fatty acid mobilization and uptake helps preserve insulin sensitivity in obese women
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4216778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24785103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2014.70
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