scholarly journals Caveolin-3 knockout mice show increased adiposity and whole body insulin resistance, with ligand-induced insulin receptor instability in skeletal muscle

2005 ◽  
Vol 288 (6) ◽  
pp. C1317-C1331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franco Capozza ◽  
Terry P. Combs ◽  
Alex W. Cohen ◽  
You-Ree Cho ◽  
So-Young Park ◽  
...  

Caveolin-3 (Cav-3) is expressed predominantly in skeletal muscle fibers, where it drives caveolae formation at the muscle cell's plasma membrane. In vitro studies have suggested that Cav-3 may play a positive role in insulin signaling and energy metabolism. We directly address the in vivo metabolic consequences of genetic ablation of Cav-3 in mice as it relates to insulin action, glucose metabolism, and lipid homeostasis. At age 2 mo, Cav-3 null mice are significantly larger than wild-type mice, and display significant postprandial hyperinsulinemia, whole body insulin resistance, and whole body glucose intolerance. Studies using hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps revealed that Cav-3 null mice exhibited 20% and 40% decreases in insulin-stimulated whole body glucose uptake and whole body glycogen synthesis, respectively. Whole body insulin resistance was mostly attributed to 20% and 40% decreases in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and glucose metabolic flux in the skeletal muscle of Cav-3 null mice. In addition, insulin-mediated suppression of hepatic glucose production was significantly reduced in Cav-3 null mice, indicating hepatic insulin resistance. Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in white adipose tissue, which does not express Cav-3, was decreased by ∼70% in Cav-3 null mice, suggestive of an insulin-resistant state for this tissue. During fasting, Cav-3 null mice possess normal insulin receptor protein levels in their skeletal muscle. However, after 15 min of acute insulin stimulation, Cav-3 null mice show dramatically reduced levels of the insulin receptor protein, compared with wild-type mice treated identically. These results suggest that Cav-3 normally functions to increase the stability of the insulin receptor at the plasma membrane, preventing its rapid degradation, i.e., by blocking or slowing ligand-induced receptor downregulation. Thus our results demonstrate the importance of Cav-3 in regulating whole body glucose homeostasis in vivo and its possible role in the development of insulin resistance. These findings may have clinical implications for the early diagnosis and treatment of caveolinopathies.

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A443-A444
Author(s):  
Alba Moreno-Asso ◽  
Luke C McIlvenna ◽  
Rhiannon K Patten ◽  
Andrew J McAinch ◽  
Raymond J Rodgers ◽  
...  

Abstract Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common female endocrinopathy affecting metabolic and reproductive health of 8–13% of reproductive-age women. Insulin resistance (IR) appears to underpin the pathophysiology of PCOS and is present in approximately 38–95% of women with PCOS. This underlying IR has been identified as unique from, but synergistic with, obesity-induced IR (1). Skeletal muscle accounts for up to 85% of whole-body insulin-stimulated glucose uptake; however, in PCOS this is reduced by about 27% when assessed by a euglycaemic-hyperinsulinaemic clamp (2). Interestingly, this reduced insulin-stimulated glucose uptake observed in skeletal muscle tissue is not retained in cultured myotubes (3), suggesting that in vivo environmental factors may play a role in this PCOS-specific IR. Yet, the molecular mechanisms regulating IR remain unclear (4). A potential environmental mechanism contributing to the development of peripheral IR may be the extracellular matrix remodelling and aberrant transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) signalling. Previous work demonstrated that TGFβ superfamily ligands are involved in the increased collagen deposition and fibrotic tissue in the ovaries, and suggested that these ligands may be involved in the metabolic morbidity associated with PCOS (5). In this study, we investigated the effects of TGFβ1 (1, 5 ng/ml), and the Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH; 5, 10, 30 ng/ml), a TGFβ superfamily ligand elevated in women with PCOS, as causal factors of IR in cultured myotubes from women with PCOS (n=5) and healthy controls (n=5). TGFβ1 did not have a significant effect on insulin signalling but induced expression of some ECM related genes and proteins, and increased glucose uptake via Smad2/3 signalling in myotubes from both groups. Conversely, AMH did not appear to activate the TGFβ/Smad signalling pathway and had no significant impact on insulin signalling or glucose uptake in any of the groups. In conclusion, these findings suggest that TGFβ1, but not AMH, may play a role in skeletal muscle ECM remodelling/fibrosis and glucose metabolism in PCOS but does not have a direct effect on insulin signalling pathway. Further research is required to elucidate its contribution to the development of in vivo skeletal muscle IR and broader impact in this syndrome. References: (1) Stepto et al., Hum Reprod 2013 Mar;28(3):777–784. (2) Cassar et al., Hum Reprod 2016 Nov;31(11):2619–2631. (3) Corbould et al., Am J Physiol-Endoc 2005 May;88(5):E1047-54. (4) Stepto et al., J Clin Endocrinol Metab, 2019 Nov 1;104(11):5372–5381. (5) Raja-Khan et al., Reprod Sci 2014 Jan;21(1):20–31.


2007 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 215-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark E. Cleasby ◽  
Tracie A. Reinten ◽  
Gregory J. Cooney ◽  
David E. James ◽  
Edward W. Kraegen

Abstract The phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway is thought to be essential for normal insulin action and glucose metabolism in skeletal muscle and has been shown to be dysregulated in insulin resistance. However, the specific roles of and signaling pathways triggered by Akt isoforms have not been fully assessed in muscle in vivo. We overexpressed constitutively active (ca-) Akt-1 or Akt-2 constructs in muscle using in vivo electrotransfer and, after 1 wk, assessed the roles of each isoform on glucose metabolism and fiber growth. We achieved greater than 2.5-fold increases in total Ser473 phosphorylation in muscles expressing ca-Akt-1 and ca-Akt-2, respectively. Both isoforms caused hypertrophy of muscle fibers, consistent with increases in p70S6kinase phosphorylation, and a 60% increase in glycogen accumulation, although only Akt-1 increased glycogen synthase kinase-3β phosphorylation. Akt-2, but not Akt-1, increased basal glucose uptake (by 33%, P = 0.004) and incorporation into glycogen and lipids, suggesting a specific effect on glucose transport. Consistent with this, short hairpin RNA-mediated silencing of Akt-2 caused reductions in glycogen storage and glucose uptake. Consistent with Akt-mediated insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1) degradation, we observed approximately 30% reductions in IRS-1 protein in muscle overexpressing ca-Akt-1 or ca-Akt-2. Despite this, we observed no decrease in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. Furthermore, a 68% reduction in IRS-1 levels induced using short hairpin RNAs targeting IRS-1 also did not affect glucose disposal after a glucose load. These data indicate distinct roles for Akt-1 and Akt-2 in muscle glucose metabolism and that moderate reductions in IRS-1 expression do not result in the development of insulin resistance in skeletal muscle in vivo.


1993 ◽  
Vol 264 (5) ◽  
pp. R984-R991 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. H. Lang

The macrophage secretory product tumor necrosis factor (TNF) impairs insulin action on peripheral glucose uptake and hepatic glucose output. Because circulating catecholamines are also elevated by TNF, the present study was performed to determine the role of the adrenergic system in eliciting the insulin resistance. Human recombinant TNF (1 microgram.h-1.kg-1) was infused intravenously into chronically catheterized fasted rats for approximately 18 h. Before TNF, an infusion of either saline, propranolol (nonselective beta-antagonist), atenolol (selective beta 1-antagonist), or phentolamine (alpha-antagonist) was started and continued throughout the experimental protocol. Infusion of either the alpha- or beta-receptor antagonist failed to prevent the TNF-induced increase in basal glucose uptake or hepatic glucose output. Under euglycemic hyperinsulinemic conditions, whole body glucose disposal was lower in TNF-infused rats than in control animals. This resulted from a decreased rate of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by skeletal muscle, skin, and intestine. In propranolol-infused rats, but not in those receiving atenolol or phentolamine, the TNF-induced decrease in whole body glucose uptake was partially prevented. Propranolol attenuated the development of peripheral insulin resistance by selectively preventing the decrease in glucose uptake by skeletal muscle but not by skin and ileum. Propranolol was also able to ameliorate the hepatic insulin resistance produced by TNF. These results suggest that beta-adrenergic stimulation, probably mediated by a beta 2-adrenergic mechanism, is partially responsible for the development of both peripheral and hepatic insulin resistance in animals infused with TNF.


2008 ◽  
Vol 294 (1) ◽  
pp. E28-E35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michale Bouskila ◽  
Michael F. Hirshman ◽  
Jørgen Jensen ◽  
Laurie J. Goodyear ◽  
Kei Sakamoto

Insulin promotes dephosphorylation and activation of glycogen synthase (GS) by inactivating glycogen synthase kinase (GSK) 3 through phosphorylation. Insulin also promotes glucose uptake and glucose 6-phosphate (G-6- P) production, which allosterically activates GS. The relative importance of these two regulatory mechanisms in the activation of GS in vivo is unknown. The aim of this study was to investigate if dephosphorylation of GS mediated via GSK3 is required for normal glycogen synthesis in skeletal muscle with insulin. We employed GSK3 knockin mice in which wild-type GSK3α and -β genes are replaced with mutant forms (GSK3α/βS21A/S21A/S9A/S9A), which are nonresponsive to insulin. Although insulin failed to promote dephosphorylation and activation of GS in GSK3α/βS21A/S21A/S9A/S9Amice, glycogen content in different muscles from these mice was similar compared with wild-type mice. Basal and epinephrine-stimulated activity of muscle glycogen phosphorylase was comparable between wild-type and GSK3 knockin mice. Incubation of isolated soleus muscle in Krebs buffer containing 5.5 mM glucose in the presence or absence of insulin revealed that the levels of G-6- P, the rate of [14C]glucose incorporation into glycogen, and an increase in total glycogen content were similar between wild-type and GSK3 knockin mice. Injection of glucose containing 2-deoxy-[3H]glucose and [14C]glucose also resulted in similar rates of muscle glucose uptake and glycogen synthesis in vivo between wild-type and GSK3 knockin mice. These results suggest that insulin-mediated inhibition of GSK3 is not a rate-limiting step in muscle glycogen synthesis in mice. This suggests that allosteric regulation of GS by G-6- P may play a key role in insulin-stimulated muscle glycogen synthesis in vivo.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. R169-R183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia Iozzo ◽  
Maria Angela Guzzardi

The prevalence of obesity has reached epidemic proportions and keeps growing. Obesity seems implicated in the pathogenesis of cognitive dysfunction, Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, and vice versa. Growing scientific efforts are being devoted to the identification of central mechanisms underlying the frequent association between obesity and cognitive dysfunction. Glucose brain handling undergoes dynamic changes during the life-course, suggesting that its alterations might precede and contribute to degenerative changes or signaling abnormalities. Imaging of the glucose analog 18F-labeled fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) by positron emission tomography (PET) is the gold-standard for the assessment of cerebral glucose metabolism in vivo. This review summarizes the current literature addressing brain glucose uptake measured by PET imaging, and the effect of insulin on brain metabolism, trying to embrace a life-course vision in the identification of patterns that may explain (and contribute to) the frequent association between obesity and cognitive dysfunction. The current evidence supports that brain hypermetabolism and brain insulin resistance occur in selected high-risk conditions as a transient phenomenon, eventually evolving toward normal or low values during life or disease progression. Associative studies suggest that brain hypermetabolism predicts low BDNF levels, hepatic and whole body insulin resistance, food desire and an unfavorable balance between anticipated reward from food and cognitive inhibitory control. Emerging mechanistic links involve the microbiota and the metabolome, which correlate with brain metabolism and cognition, deserving attention as potential future prevention targets.


2001 ◽  
Vol 281 (1) ◽  
pp. E62-E71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Lavigne ◽  
Frédéric Tremblay ◽  
Geneviève Asselin ◽  
Hélène Jacques ◽  
André Marette

In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that fish protein may represent a key constituent of fish with glucoregulatory activity. Three groups of rats were fed a high-fat diet in which the protein source was casein, fish (cod) protein, or soy protein; these groups were compared with a group of chow-fed controls. High-fat feeding led to severe whole body and skeletal muscle insulin resistance in casein- or soy protein-fed rats, as assessed by the euglycemic clamp technique coupled with measurements of 2-deoxy-d-[3H]glucose uptake rates by individual tissues. However, feeding cod protein fully prevented the development of insulin resistance in high fat-fed rats. These animals exhibited higher rates of insulin-mediated muscle glucose disposal that were comparable to those of chow-fed rats. The beneficial effects of cod protein occurred without any reductions in body weight gain, adipose tissue accretion, or expression of tumor necrosis factor-α in fat and muscle. Moreover, L6 myocytes exposed to cod protein-derived amino acids showed greater rates of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake compared with cells incubated with casein- or soy protein-derived amino acids. These data demonstrate that feeding cod protein prevents obesity-induced muscle insulin resistance in high fat-fed obese rats at least in part through a direct action of amino acids on insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in skeletal muscle cells.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alba Moreno-Asso ◽  
Luke C McIlvenna ◽  
Rhiannon K Patten ◽  
Andrew J McAinch ◽  
Raymond J Rodgers ◽  
...  

Abstract Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common female endocrine disorder affecting metabolic, reproductive and mental health of 8-13% of reproductive-age women. Insulin resistance (IR) appears to underpin the pathophysiology of PCOS and is present in approximately 85% of women with PCOS. This underlying IR has been identified as unique from, but synergistic with, obesity-induced IR (1). Skeletal muscle accounts for up to 85% of whole body insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, however, in PCOS this is reduced about 27% when assessed by hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp (2). Interestingly, this reduced insulin-stimulated glucose uptake observed in skeletal muscle tissue is not retained in cultured myotubes (3), suggesting that environmental factors may play a role in this PCOS-specific IR. Yet, the molecular mechanisms regulating IR remain unclear (4). Previous work suggested that Transforming Growth Factor Beta (TGFβ) superfamily ligands may be involved in the metabolic morbidity associated with PCOS (5). In this study, we investigated the effects of TGFβ1 (1, 5ng/ml), and the Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH; 5, 10, 30ng/ml), a novel TGFβ superfamily ligand elevated in women with PCOS, as causal factors of IR in cultured myotubes from women with PCOS (n=10) and healthy controls (n=10). AMH negatively affected glucose uptake and insulin signalling increasing p-IRS1 (ser312) in a dose-dependent manner in myotubes from both women with and without PCOS. AMH did not appear to activate the canonical TGFβ/BMP signalling pathway. Conversely, TGFβ1 had an opposite effect in both PCOS and control myotubes cultures, decreasing phosphorylation of IRS1 (ser312) and enhancing glucose uptake via Smad2/3 signalling. In conclusion, these results suggest that AMH may play a role in skeletal muscle IR observed in PCOS, however, further research is required to elucidate its mechanisms of action and broader impact in this syndrome. References: (1) Stepto et al. Hum Reprod 2013 Mar;28(3):777-784. (2) Cassar et al. Hum Reprod 2016 Nov;31(11):2619-2631. (3) Corbould et al., Am J Physiol-Endoc 2005 May;88(5):E1047-54. (4) Stepto et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab, 2019 Nov 1;104(11):5372-5381. (5) Raja-Khan et al. Reprod Sci 2014 Jan;21(1):20-31.


1997 ◽  
Vol 272 (2) ◽  
pp. E288-E296 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. K. Kim ◽  
J. H. Youn

To determine whether an impairment of intracellular glucose metabolism causes insulin resistance, we examined the effects of suppression of glycolysis or glycogen synthesis on whole body and skeletal muscle insulin-stimulated glucose uptake during 450-min hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamps in conscious rats. After the initial 150 min to attain steady-state insulin action, animals received an additional infusion of saline, Intralipid and heparin (to suppress glycolysis), or amylin (to suppress glycogen synthesis) for up to 300 min. Insulin-stimulated whole body glucose fluxes were constant with saline infusion (n = 7). In contrast, Intralipid infusion (n = 7) suppressed glycolysis by approximately 32%, and amylin infusion (n = 7) suppressed glycogen synthesis by approximately 45% within 30 min after the start of the infusions (P < 0.05). The suppression of metabolic fluxes increased muscle glucose 6-phosphate levels (P < 0.05), but this did not immediately affect insulin-stimulated glucose uptake due to compensatory increases in other metabolic fluxes. Insulin-stimulated whole body glucose uptake started to decrease at approximately 60 min and was significantly decreased by approximately 30% at the end of clamps (P < 0.05). Similar patterns of changes in insulin-stimulated glucose fluxes were observed in individual skeletal muscles. Thus the suppression of intracellular glucose metabolism caused decreases in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake through a cellular adaptive mechanism in response to a prolonged elevation of glucose 6-phosphate rather than the classic mechanism involving glucose 6-phosphate inhibition of hexokinase.


Endocrinology ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 146 (8) ◽  
pp. 3417-3427 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter J. Klover ◽  
Alicia H. Clementi ◽  
Robert A. Mooney

Abstract Obesity and insulin resistance are considered chronic inflammatory states, in part because circulating IL-6 is elevated. Exogenous IL-6 can induce hepatic insulin resistance in vitro and in vivo. The importance of endogenous IL-6, however, to insulin resistance of obesity is unresolved. To test the hypothesis that IL-6 contributes to the inflammation and insulin resistance of obesity, IL-6 was depleted in Lepob mice by injection of IL-6-neutralizing antibody. In untreated Lepob mice, signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3) activation was increased compared with that in lean controls, consistent with an inflammatory state. With IL-6 depletion, activation of STAT3 in liver and adipose tissue and expression of haptoglobin were reduced. Expression of the IL-6-dependent, hepatic acute phase protein fibrinogen was also decreased. Using the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp technique, insulin-dependent suppression of endogenous glucose production was 89% in IL-6-depleted Lepob mice, in contrast to only 32% in Lepob controls, indicating a marked increase in hepatic insulin sensitivity. A significant change in glucose uptake in skeletal muscle after IL-6 neutralization was not observed. In a direct comparison of hepatic insulin signaling in Lepob mice treated with anti-IL-6 vs. IgG-treated controls, insulin-dependent insulin receptor autophosphorylation and activation of Akt (pSer473) were increased by nearly 50% with IL-6 depletion. In adipose tissue, insulin receptor signaling showed no significant change despite major reductions in STAT3 phosphorylation and haptoglobin expression. In diet-induced obese mice, depletion of IL-6 improved insulin responsiveness in 2-h insulin tolerance tests. In conclusion, these results indicate that IL-6 plays an important and selective role in hepatic insulin resistance of obesity.


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