| Literature DB >> 36009446 |
Sonia M Najjar1,2, Raziyeh Abdolahipour1, Hilda E Ghadieh3, Marziyeh Salehi Jahromi1, John A Najjar4, Basil A M Abuamreh1, Sobia Zaidi1, Sivarajan Kumarasamy1,2, Harrison T Muturi1,2.
Abstract
Insulin stores lipid in adipocytes and prevents lipolysis and the release of non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA). Excessive release of NEFA during sustained energy supply and increase in abdominal adiposity trigger systemic insulin resistance, including in the liver, a major site of insulin clearance. This causes a reduction in insulin clearance as a compensatory mechanism to insulin resistance in obesity. On the other hand, reduced insulin clearance in the liver can cause chronic hyperinsulinemia, followed by downregulation of insulin receptor and insulin resistance. Delineating the cause-effect relationship between reduced insulin clearance and insulin resistance has been complicated by the fact that insulin action and clearance are mechanistically linked to insulin binding to its receptors. This review discusses how NEFA mobilization contributes to the reciprocal relationship between insulin resistance and reduced hepatic insulin clearance, and how this may be implicated in the pathogenesis of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.Entities:
Keywords: hyperinsulinemia; insulin clearance; insulin resistance; non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD); non-esterified fatty acids
Year: 2022 PMID: 36009446 PMCID: PMC9405499 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10081899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1CEACAM1 phosphorylation induces hepatic insulin clearance. In response to pulses of secreted insulin from pancreatic β-cells (green circles), the insulin receptor (IR) tyrosine kinase on the surface membrane of hepatocytes is activated. This phosphorylates CEACAM1 on the species conserved tyrosine (pY) 488 residue, an event that mediates the formation of a stable insulin–IR–CEACAM1 complex to increase the rate of insulin endocytosis and targeting to its degradation process (green upward arrow). Fatty acid synthase (FASN) binds to pY488 of CEACAM1 to cause its detachment and facilitate the separation of insulin from its receptor to undergo degradation in the acidic milieu of late endosomes (grey circles). FASN binding to phosphorylated CEACAM1 also causes repression of FASN activity (red downward arrow), thus maintaining low lipogenesis in the liver despite the higher level of insulin in the portal vein than systemic circulation. Not shown in this schematic diagram, IR recycles back to the surface membrane.
Figure 2Elevated de novo lipogenesis in obesity. Under conditions of abdominal obesity and insulin resistance, compensatory insulin secretion increases (green upward arrow) and pulsatility of insulin release is lost. This compromises insulin signaling, endocytosis (dotted lines), and degradation (red downward arrow). The resultant reduction in insulin clearance contributes to chronic hyperinsulinemia (green upward arrow), which, in turn, activates SREBP-1c to induce FASN expression and, subsequently, lipogenesis and hepatic steatosis.
Figure 3NEFA play a primary role in reducing insulin clearance. High-fat feeding leads to visceral obesity with increased NEFA release into the portal vein even before insulin resistance develops in the adipose tissue. This activates PKC-JNK pathways to cause hepatic insulin resistance and ensuing decrease in Ceacam1 expression. Reduction in Ceacam1 by <50% provides a positive feedback mechanism on fatty acid β-oxidation. When the loss of Ceacam1 reaches >50%, insulin clearance is reduced and chronic hyperinsulinemia ensues, followed by increased lipogenesis and VLDL-triglyceride (VLDL-TG) redistribution to white adipose tissue to trigger sustained NEFA and adipokine release and, subsequently, systemic insulin resistance.
Figure 4Reduced hepatic insulin clearance causes hepatic insulin resistance independently of NEFA release. Liver-specific Ceacam1 null mutation causes reduction in insulin clearance which, in turn, leads to chronic hyperinsulinemia. This drives hepatic insulin resistance and lipogenesis, followed by redistribution of VLDL-TG to WAT and lipolysis.