| Literature DB >> 29875472 |
Christoph Nowak1,2, Susanne Hetty1, Samira Salihovic1, Casimiro Castillejo-Lopez1, Andrea Ganna3,4,5,6, Naomi L Cook1, Corey D Broeckling7, Jessica E Prenni7, Xia Shen6,8, Vilmantas Giedraitis9, Johan Ärnlöv2,10, Lars Lind11, Christian Berne12, Johan Sundström11, Tove Fall1, Erik Ingelsson13,14,15.
Abstract
Insulin resistance (IR) predisposes to type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease but its causes are incompletely understood. Metabolic challenges like the oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) can reveal pathogenic mechanisms. We aimed to discover associations of IR with metabolite trajectories during OGTT. In 470 non-diabetic men (age 70.6 ± 0.6 years), plasma samples obtained at 0, 30 and 120 minutes during an OGTT were analyzed by untargeted liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry metabolomics. IR was assessed with the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp method. We applied age-adjusted linear regression to identify metabolites whose concentration change was related to IR. Nine trajectories, including monounsaturated fatty acids, lysophosphatidylethanolamines and a bile acid, were significantly associated with IR, with the strongest associations observed for medium-chain acylcarnitines C10 and C12, and no associations with L-carnitine or C2-, C8-, C14- or C16-carnitine. Concentrations of C10- and C12-carnitine decreased during OGTT with a blunted decline in participants with worse insulin resistance. Associations persisted after adjustment for obesity, fasting insulin and fasting glucose. In mouse 3T3-L1 adipocytes exposed to different acylcarnitines, we observed blunted insulin-stimulated glucose uptake after treatment with C10- or C12-carnitine. In conclusion, our results identify medium-chain acylcarnitines as possible contributors to IR.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29875472 PMCID: PMC5989236 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-26701-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Characteristics of 470 non-diabetic men included in the present study (mean ± SD or proportion).
| Trait | |
|---|---|
| M/IA | 5.3 ± 2.4 |
| Fasting glucose (mmol/L) | 5.4 ± 0.6 |
| Fasting insulin (mU/L) | 13.6 ± 6.6 |
| OGTT glucose (AUC) | 56.0 ± 30.0 |
| OGTT insulin (AUC) | 1225.9 ± 749.5 |
| Current smokerB | 20.1% |
| At least moderate physical activity | 88.3% |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 26.0 ± 3.3 |
| Waist circumference (cm) | 93.2 ± 9.5 |
| Systolic BP (mmHg) | 144 ± 19 |
| Diastolic BP (mmHg) | 82 ± 10 |
| Antihypertensive medication | 30.2% |
| Serum triglycerides (mmol/L) | 1.4 ± 0.7 |
| Total serum cholesterol (mmol/L) | 5.9 ± 1.0 |
| HDL-cholesterol (mmol/L) | 1.3 ± 0.4 |
| Lipid medicationB | 10.2% |
| C-reactive protein (mg/L) | 3.3 ± 4.7 |
AHEC M/I in mg × kg−1 × kg BW−1 × min−1 per mU/L × 100.
BMissing responses (3.3% for smoking, 1.7% for lipid medication) counted as “no”.
Figure 1Abundance of plasma metabolites during OGTT according to insulin sensitivity. UPLC-TOF-MS signal intensity normalized for factors of unwanted variability is plotted on log2-scale in n = 470 non-diabetic men grouped according to quartile of insulin sensitivity (M/I) in boxplots. Quartile 1 (green) represents highest IR; quartile 4 (red) the least IR.
Figure 2Abundance of plasma acylcarnitines during OGTT according to insulin sensitivity. (A) Log2-scaled, normalized UPLC-TOF-MS signal intensity of detected carnitine species according to quartile of insulin sensitivity (M/I) in boxplots (n = 470). (B) Difference in signal change 30–120 min between highest IR (M/I quartile 1, n = 117) and lowest IR (M/I quartile 4, n = 117) for different acylcarnitines.
Figure 3Glucose uptake and lipolysis in murine 3T3-L1 adipocytes. (a,b) Glucose uptake was quantified by fluorescent 2-NBD-glucose uptake (100 μg/mL, 20 min incubation with/without 100 nM insulin (Ins)) in DMEM (1 g/L glucose) following overnight serum-starvation and 2 h incubation with/without 100 µM acylcarnitines (including 1 h in glucose-free DMEM). Intracellular fluorescence is expressed in relation to basal uptake in the control cells. Differences in glucose uptake between basal and insulin-stimulated conditions are shown in boxplots (a); panel (b) shows individual conditions from the same experiments. (c,d) Lipolysis was measured in overnight serum-starved cells in DMEM over 1 h with/without exposure to 100 nM isoproterenol (Iso) ± 10 nM Ins. Cells were pre-incubated for 2 h with vehicle or 100 µM acylcarnitines. Cell density-normalized glycerol release is shown as the difference in glycerol release after insulin stimulation in panel (c), individual conditions in the same experiments are shown in panel (d). Experiments were reproduced in replicates for glucose uptake (n = 3 experiment) or triplicates for lipolysis (n = 2 per experiment) and combined results are shown. P-values are from two-tailed t-tests; error bars indicate standard errors.