Literature DB >> 15894466

Reduced insulin-mediated citrate synthase activity in cultured skeletal muscle cells from patients with type 2 diabetes: evidence for an intrinsic oxidative enzyme defect.

Niels Ortenblad1, Martin Mogensen, Ingrid Petersen, Kurt Højlund, Klaus Levin, Kent Sahlin, Henning Beck-Nielsen, Michael Gaster.   

Abstract

In myotubes established from patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D), lipid oxidation and insulin-mediated glucose oxidation are reduced, whereas in myotubes from obese non-diabetic subjects, exposure to palmitate impairs insulin-mediated glucose oxidation. To determine the underlying mechanisms of these metabolic malfunctions, we studied mitochondrial respiration, uncoupled respiration and oxidative enzyme activities (citrate synthase (CS), 3-hydroxy-acyl-CoA-dehydrogenase activity (HAD)) before and after acute exposure to insulin and/or palmitate in myotubes established from healthy lean and obese subjects and T2D patients. Basal CS activity was lower (14%) in diabetic myotubes compared with myotubes from lean controls (P=0.03). Incubation with insulin (1 microM) for 4 h increased the CS activity (26-33%) in myotubes from both lean (P=0.02) and obese controls (P<0.001), but not from diabetic subjects. Co-incubation with palmitate (0.6 mM) for 4 h abolished the stimulatory effect of insulin on CS activity in non-diabetic myotubes. No differences were detected in mitochondrial respiration and HAD activity between myotubes from non-diabetic subjects and T2D patients, and none of these measures responded to high levels of insulin and/or palmitate. These results provide evidence for an intrinsic defect in CS activity, which may play a role in the pathogenesis of T2D. Moreover, the data suggest that insulin resistance at the CS level can be induced by exposure to high free fatty acid levels.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15894466     DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2005.04.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta        ISSN: 0006-3002


  33 in total

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