| Literature DB >> 35641694 |
Samuel Furse1,2,3.
Abstract
Much evidence for diabetes mellitus being associated with dysregulated lipid metabolism has been accrued from studies using blood plasma. However, the systemic dysregulation these results point to is not understood. This study used Lipid Traffic Analysis on data from a mouse model of diabetes to test the hypothesis that the systemic control of lipid metabolism differed in a model of diabetes. This provided eidence for changes in the systemic control of both triglyceride and phospholipid metabolism that were not attributable to dietary intake. This supports the conclusion that diabetes is a systemic condition associated with dysregulated lipid metabolism through several pathways.Entities:
Keywords: Lipid metabolism; Lipid traffic analysis; T2DM
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35641694 PMCID: PMC9156495 DOI: 10.1007/s11306-022-01884-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolomics ISSN: 1573-3882 Impact factor: 4.747
Fig. 1The abundance of lipid classes across tissue types, expressed as error normalised fold change (ENFC (Furse et al., 2021b)) between control and diabetic mice. Panel A Triglycerides (TGs); B Phosphatidylcholines (PCs); C Phosphatidylethanolamines; D Phosphatidylinositols. The green areas represent an increase in the abundance of the respective lipid head group of at least one division above 0 in the diabetic group, whereas the red zone represents a decrease in abundance of that lipid head group with respect to the control group
Fig. 2Switch analysis of triglyceride (TG) variables in a mouse model of diabetes. Inset pie chart shows the -type TGs. No -type lipids were detected. The Jaccard-Tanimoto coefficients (J) and probability (p) values that describe the similarity between sets of variables