Fibroblast growth factor-21 improves insulin action in non-lactating ewes

Author(s):  
Cassandra L Lamb ◽  
Sarah L. Giesy ◽  
Molly M McGuckin ◽  
James W. Perfield ◽  
Anthony Butterfield ◽  
...  

During metabolically demanding physiological states, ruminants and other mammals coordinate nutrient use among tissues by varying the set point of insulin action. This set point is regulated in part by metabolic hormones with some antagonizing (e.g., growth hormone and TNFa) and others potentiating (e.g., adiponectin) insulin action. Fibroblast growth factor-21 (FGF21) was recently identified as a sensitizing hormone in rodent and primate models of defective insulin action. FGF21 administration, however, failed to improve insulin action in dairy cows during the naturally occurring insulin resistance of lactation, raising the possibility that ruminants as a class of animals or lactation as a physiological state are unresponsive to FGF21. To start addressing this question, we asked whether FGF21 could improve insulin action in non-lactating ewes. Gene expression studies showed that the ovine FGF21 system resembles that of other species, with liver as the major site of FGF21 expression and adipose tissue as a target tissue based on high expression of the FGF21 receptor complex and activation of p44/42 ERK1/2 following exogenous FGF21 administration. FGF21 treatment for 13 days reduced plasma glucose and insulin over the entire treatment period and improved glucose disposal during a glucose tolerance test. FGF21 increased plasma adiponectin by day 3 of treatment but had no effect on the plasma concentrations of total, C16:0-, or C18:0-ceramide. Overall, these data confirm that the insulin-sensitizing effects of FGF21 are conserved in ruminants and raise the possibility that lactation is an FGF21 resistant state.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah C. Huen ◽  
Andrew Wang ◽  
Kyle Feola ◽  
Reina Desrouleaux ◽  
Harding H. Luan ◽  
...  

AbstractSickness behaviors, including anorexia, are evolutionarily conserved responses to acute infections. Inflammation-induced anorexia causes dramatic metabolic changes, of which components critical to survival are unique depending on the type of inflammation. Glucose supplementation during the anorectic period induced by bacterial inflammation suppresses adaptive fasting metabolic pathways, including fibroblast growth factor-21 (FGF21), and decreases survival. Consistent with this observation, FGF21 deficient mice are more susceptible to mortality from endotoxemia and poly-bacterial peritonitis, but not viral infection. Here we report that increased circulating FGF21 during bacterial inflammation is hepatic-derived, promotes cardiac function, and is required for survival. FGF21 signaling downstream of its obligate co-receptor beta-Klotho (KLB) is required. However, mice with central nervous system or adipose-specific deletion of Klb do not demonstrate any difference in response to bacterial inflammation, suggesting that multiple tissues and/or a novel FGF21 target tissue are required for the full protective effect of FGF21. These data suggest that hepatic FGF21 is a novel cardioprotective factor in bacterial sepsis.eTOC SummaryIn response to bacterial inflammation, hepatic fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21), an endocrine hormone that mediates adaptive responses to metabolic stresses such as starvation, promotes survival by supporting heart function.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fahim Ebrahimi ◽  
Carole Wolffenbuttel ◽  
Claudine A Blum ◽  
Beat Muller ◽  
Philipp Schuetz ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fahim Ebrahimi ◽  
Sandrine Urwyler ◽  
Matthias Betz ◽  
Emanuel Christ ◽  
Philipp Schuetz ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ewa Szczepańska ◽  
Małgorzata Gietka-Czernel ◽  
Piotr Glinicki ◽  
Helena Jastrzębska ◽  
Jadwiga Słowińska-Srzednicka ◽  
...  

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