| Literature DB >> 26237474 |
Robert V Farese1,2,3, Mackenzie C Lee4,5, Mini P Sajan6,7.
Abstract
This review focuses on how insulin signals to metabolic processes in health, why this signaling is frequently deranged in Western/Westernized societies, how these derangements lead to, or abet development of, insulin-resistant states of obesity, the metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes mellitus, and what our options are for restoring insulin signaling, and glucose/lipid homeostasis. A central theme in this review is that excessive hepatic activity of an archetypal protein kinase enzyme, "atypical" protein kinase C (aPKC), plays a critically important role in the development of impaired glucose metabolism, systemic insulin resistance, and excessive hepatic production of glucose, lipids and proinflammatory factors that underlie clinical problems of glucose intolerance, obesity, hepatosteatosis, hyperlipidemia, and, ultimately, type 2 diabetes. The review suggests that normally inherited genes, in particular, the aPKC isoforms, that were important for survival and longevity in times of food scarcity are now liabilities in times of over-nutrition. Fortunately, new knowledge of insulin signaling mechanisms and how an aberration of excessive hepatic aPKC activation is induced by over-nutrition puts us in a position to target this aberration by diet and/or by specific inhibitors of hepatic aPKC.Entities:
Keywords: insulin resistance; obesity; type 2 diabetes mellitus
Year: 2014 PMID: 26237474 PMCID: PMC4449650 DOI: 10.3390/jcm3030724
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Phase 1 of insulin resistance (early diet-induced obesity).
Figure 2Phase 2 of insulin resistance (later diet-induced obesity and early T2DM).
Figure 3Phase 3 of insulin resistance (later T2DM).