Literature DB >> 19890275

Combined effects of ghrelin and higher food intake enhance skeletal muscle mitochondrial oxidative capacity and AKT phosphorylation in rats with chronic kidney disease.

Rocco Barazzoni1, Xinxia Zhu, Mark Deboer, Rakesh Datta, Michael D Culler, Michela Zanetti, Gianfranco Guarnieri, Daniel L Marks.   

Abstract

Skeletal muscle mitochondrial dysfunction and insulin resistance occur in chronic kidney disease. Ghrelin is a gastric hormone previously shown to enhance muscle mitochondrial enzyme activities and AKT-mediated insulin signaling independent of food intake in healthy rats. Here we determined the impact of ghrelin treatment on anorexia, skeletal muscle mitochondrial oxidative capacity, AKT phosphorylation as a measure of insulin signaling, and lean body mass in a rat model of chronic kidney disease. Ghrelin infusion promoted higher food intake and lean body mass. Further, although muscle mitochondrial enzyme activities were low in the rats with CKD (chronic kidney disease), they normalized with ghrelin treatment, a change that was consistent with the increase in the transcript levels of regulators of mitochondrial biogenesis and lipid metabolism. This was associated with a lower muscle triglyceride content and higher AKT phosphorylation. Pair-feeding showed that mitochondrial effects of ghrelin are independent of changes in food intake, whereas combined ghrelin treatment and higher food intake were needed to enhance AKT phosphorylation. Thus, ghrelin-induced muscle mitochondrial changes and lower tissue triglycerides could favor insulin action and muscle anabolism in the presence of improvement in food intake. Our study shows that combined effects of ghrelin on appetite and muscle mitochondria improve muscle metabolic and nutritional alterations in chronic kidney disease. This could have potential beneficial impact on patient morbidity and survival.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 19890275      PMCID: PMC2857601          DOI: 10.1038/ki.2009.411

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kidney Int        ISSN: 0085-2538            Impact factor:   10.612


  35 in total

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4.  Chronic kidney disease causes defects in signaling through the insulin receptor substrate/phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway: implications for muscle atrophy.

Authors:  James L Bailey; Bin Zheng; Zhaoyong Hu; S Russ Price; William E Mitch
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5.  Ghrelin enhances in vivo skeletal muscle but not liver AKT signaling in rats.

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6.  Ghrelin treatment of chronic kidney disease: improvements in lean body mass and cytokine profile.

Authors:  Mark D Deboer; Xinxia Zhu; Peter R Levasseur; Akio Inui; Zhaoyong Hu; Guofeng Han; William E Mitch; John E Taylor; Heather A Halem; Jesse Z Dong; Rakesh Datta; Michael D Culler; Daniel L Marks
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7.  Relationships between desacylated and acylated ghrelin and insulin sensitivity in the metabolic syndrome.

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Review 9.  Disordered lipid metabolism and the pathogenesis of insulin resistance.

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Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  2007-03-08       Impact factor: 4.736

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Review 2.  Neuropeptides in the pathophysiology and treatment of cachexia.

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Review 5.  The use of ghrelin and ghrelin receptor agonists as a treatment for animal models of disease: efficacy and mechanism.

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Review 6.  Ghrelin and cachexia in chronic kidney disease.

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Review 7.  Ghrelin forms in the modulation of energy balance and metabolism.

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10.  Melanocortin-4 receptor antagonist TCMCB07 ameliorates cancer- and chronic kidney disease-associated cachexia.

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