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                  Thomas Tai-Seale, Dr.P.H. M.M.S.,M.P.H.,M.A.
                  School of Rural Public Health
                  Texas A&M Health Science Center




                                                                 1
is the inability of your muscle, fat, and liver cells to use insulin properly.




                                                                                 2
How prevalent is IR?
• Well, as the tests are not routine, no
  one seems to know for the general
  population, though the figure 25% is
  often used.
• Among healthy (non-diabetic) 1st
  degree relatives of Type 2 diabetics,
  a good estimate is about 40%.
 Volek A and Ronn W, 1999. Experimental and Clinical Endocrinology and Diabetes 107,
 140-147.




                                                                                       3
4
Here’s the relationship of blood sugar
                          levels and mortality



  Risk of
  mortality




N= 25,364 >                                 • Impaired fasting glucose is
                                              blood glucose levels
30 years old                                  between 100-125 mg/dl.
                                            • ADA criteria for diabetes is
                                              >125 mg/dl.- this includes
                                              many who don’t know they
                                              have diabetes.



                                   Years

               DECODE Study Group Lancet 1999, 354: 617-621.
                                                                             5
So, let’s start at the beginning – where we’d like
  to stop this disease progression - and study




   (and to a much lesser degree in fat)




                                                     6
Here’s a muscle cell in red. Note, it has a “lock.”

               The lock is the insulin receptor.

  The pancreas
  detects sugar
  (or some amino acids)                                                       Insulin receptor
  after a meal and makes
  insulin in response.                                  Insulin
  Insulin is carried in the blood
  to the lock on the cell surface.
 This begins the process to bring a
 glucose transporting door to the cell
 surface and open it.
  Sugar enters and the muscle then uses it
  for fuel or stores it as glycogen.
Technical mumbo jumbo: Insulin binding causes glucose transporters (GLUT4)
stored in vesicles inside the cell to be slowly released (translocated) to the surface
where they allow glucose in by diffusion. In the cell, glucose binds to and inhibits
                                                                                          Muscle cell
glycogen phosphorylase (the enzyme which breaks down glycogen). Within an hour of
insulin removal, GLUT4 are largely restored to the cytoplasm by endocytosis in what
are called “clatharin-coated pits.” For FFA insulin effects see Newgard & McGarry 1995,
Ann Review Biochem 64,689-719 and McGarry 2002 Diabetes 51:7-18.                                        7
Note: it’s not only
malfunctioning          But, what would happen
receptors on muscle to the blood sugar level if
that causes blood       some of the locks were
sugar to rise, the
liver also produces damaged, as sugar keeps
excess glucose in IR.coming in?                                                                Insulin receptors
            That’s right, blood sugar would rise as long as
            sugar has trouble getting into the cell.
                                                 Insulin
      And what would happen
      to the insulin level?
    It too would rise in response to persistent sugar.

      In Phase 1 (a.k.a. early) IR, the extra
      insulin would open some doors, so                      Pancreas
      blood sugar and insulin would fall, and you
      wouldn’t’ test hyperglycemic or hyperinsulinemic even
      though some IR receptors are not working.
         Sad note: If you have relatives who are diabetic (like me),
         chances are good that your insulin receptors are not working
         well, even if you don’t test positive for hyperglycemia.
Pratipanawatr W, Pratipanawatr T, Cusi K, Berria R, Adams JM, Jenkinson CP, Maezono K, DeFronzo RA, Mandarino LJ, 2001
Skeletal muscle insulin resistance in normoglycemic subjects with a strong family history of type 2 diabetes is associated with
decreased insulin stimulated, insulin receptor substrate-1 tyrosine phosphorylation Diabetes 50, 2572-2578. Muscle cell           8
In Phase 2 IR, there is increased
                           insulin resistance, i.e. more
                           locks are damaged, so blood
                           sugar builds up

                                                                                             Insulin receptors
      and your pancreas responds
      by making more insulin.                               Insulin

              The load of sugar,
              however, is too great,
              and the pancreas can’t
              produce enough insulin
              to reduce it.
                                                                Pancreas

                 You now test positive for BOTH
                 Impaired Glucose Tolerance (glucose
                 levels of 140 to 199 mg per dL (7.8 to 11.0
                 mmol) two-hours after you’ve had 75-g
                 oral glucose) AND hyperinsulinemia.
Increased IR in IGT - see: Tripathy D, Carlsson M, Almgren P, Isomaa B, Taskinen M-R, Tuomi T,
Groop LC, 2000 Insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity in relation to glucose-tolerance. Lessons
from the Botnia Study. Diabetes 49 975-980.                                                          Muscle cell   9
In Phase 3 IR, IR stays the same, but…




                                     10
I’m sick of
                                                                                                     making all
                                                                                                     these keys
                                                                                                        for this
    …the pancreas                                                                                    crazy lock
    gets tired of                                                  Insulin
    having to make
    so much insulin.


                                                                        Pancreas




In progressing from IGT to T2DM, IR does not change, but the pancreas wears out: Reaven GM, Holenbach CB,
Chen YDI, 1989. Relationship between glucose tolerance, insulin secretion, and insulin action in non-obese
individuals with varying degrees of glucose tolerance. Diabetologica 32:52-55. Bogardus C, Lillioja S, Howard
BV, Reaven G, Mott D, 1984. Relationship between insulin secretion, insulin action, and fasting plasma glucose
concentration in nondiabetic and noninsulin dependent diabetic subjects. J. Clinical Investigations, 74:1238-1246.   Muscle cell   11
I
    and quits
    making insulin.
                                       quit!
You’d no longer be
hyper-insulinemic,



  and you’d have to start
  buying your insulin at
  the drug store.

    You’d also begin to have to deal with the
    bad effects of all that excess sugar.
                                                Muscle cell   12
So, IR (and thus diabetes) is a disease about
broken insulin receptors (locks) that govern
the inflow of glucose and fats (through
doors) into muscle cells - and by a similar
mechanism, but to a much lesser extent, into
fat cells. It is also a disease about defective
pancreatic beta cells.
           Note: It is still unknown if insulin resistance (broken
           locks) or defective insulin secretion (broken keys) is the
           primary defect leading to Type 2 diabetes, but both are
           present in early stages. –see Williams 11th ed, pp. 6-7 of
           the section on pathogenesis.




                                                                        13
Please note that in addition to
        removing sugar from the blood,
      insulin also clears Free Fatty Acids
              (a.k.a. non-esterified fatty acids, NEFA)
  from plasma – especially after a meal.
Bonen et al, 2004. Regulation of fatty acid transport by fatty acid translocase/CD36. Proc Nutr Soc 63: 245–249.
Miles et al. 2003 Nocturnal and postprandial free fatty acid kinetics in normal and type 2 diabetic subjects: effects
of insulin sensitization therapy. Diabetes 52: 675–681, 2003.



                The main mechanism by which insulin does this
                is blocking the appearance of Free Fatty Acids
                (FFA) into the blood - by blocking lipolysis.
                Secondarily, it also removes FFA from the blood.
               Carpentier et al 2007. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 292: E693–E701.


                                                                                                                        14
Is Insulin Resistance Bad
                              Human Design?
• Consider what it
  would do in times of
  food scarcity.
• Insulin resistance
  would cause more
  glucose to be
  available to the
  brain –while
  muscles could run
  on fats.
• Thus, it was
  probably originally
  adaptive (Landsberg 2006,
  Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and
  Physiology 33: 863-867.)
                                               Of course, that was before television!

                                                                                        15
•   As you’ve seen, insulin is
    secreted in response to
    glucose.
•   It is also released in response
    to certain free amino acids –
    though this is not as well
    studied.
•   Initially, these were identified
    as arginine, leucine, and
    phenylalanine (Floyd et al 1966 J Clin
    Invest 45, 1487-1502; Floyd et al 1970
    Diabetes 19, 102-108.)
•   More recent studies find that
    arginine, leucine, isoleucine, and
    alanine are particularly potent at
    stimulating beta cells (Bolea et al, 1997.
    Pflugers Arch 433:699-704.)
•   A 2006 review indicates that
    arginine, leucine, and alanine,
    stimulate insulin release (Newsholme
    et al Diabetes 55 Sup 2: S39-s47).
    •   One amino acid, homocystein, inhibits
        insulin secretion.
    •   Glutamine can only stimulate insulin release
        in the presence of glucose.
    •   The ability of glutamate to stimulate insulin
        release is controversial.




                                                        16
•   If, however, you give a
    protein or amino acid source
    AND a glucose source – the
    insulin secreting capacity of
    beta cells INCREASES! (Calbet &
    Maclean, 2002. J Nutr 132:2174-2182.)

•   As glucose levels drop as
    insulin rises – until late-stage
    diabetes – it may be possible
    to delay the onset of diabetes
    by ingestion of specific
    amino acids with meals (Van
    Loon et al 2003, Diabetes Care 26(3) 625-630).

•   This mixture would also
    stimulate protein synthesis
    and inhibit the breakdown of
    protein seen in diabetes (Van
    Loon et al 2003, Diabetes Care 26(3) 625-630).




                                                     17
What about fatty acids and insulin
            release?

• Up until recently, fatty acids
  have been thought not to cause
  insulin release, but to amplify
  the effect of glucose – if present
  – on insulin release. Warnotte et al 1994
  Diabetes 43: 703-711. Parker et al 2003 Metabolism 52:1367-1371.

• This view may be changing.




                                                                     18
The question we will consider next is:
How do the keys and locks get broken?




                                            19
Well, sometimes, it’s
       genetic.

 Here, I’ll show you…




                        20
First, let’s study the normal insulin
          response to sugar.
                           The figure to the left shows
                           what happens to insulin when
                           glucose is infused – enough to
                           maintain blood glucose levels
                           two to three times the fasting
                           level for an hour.

                           Almost immediately after the
                           glucose infusion begins, plasma
                           insulin levels increase
                           dramatically.

                           This initial increase is due to
                           secretion of preformed insulin,
                           which in a few minutes is
                           significantly depleted.

                           The secondary rise in insulin
                           reflects the considerable
                           amount of newly synthesized
                           insulin that is released after
                           about 15 minutes.

                           Clearly, elevated glucose not
                           only simulates insulin secretion,
                           but also transcription of the
                           insulin gene and translation of
                           its mRNA.


                                                               21
N                                   Insulin levels
o
w

l
                                     Glucose levels
o
o
k
a   These first 5 graphs show the insulin levels (from a OGTT) across a 20 year time series.
t   Those without genetic risk for diabetes are graphed in yellow. The pattern is steady.
    Those with a family history for type 2 diabetes are in orange/red.
    The pancreas begins to lose tha ability to make insulin after the third graph.
    The next 5 graphs are matched glucose levels (mmol/l) across the same time, for those
t   without genetic risk (yellow) and with risk (orange/red).
    The horizontal white line is the cut-point for diabetes.
h   Note: even at the start of the 20 year study (furthest left), those who are at risk have
i   elevated insulin levels, but they won’t be diagnosed with diabetes for a long time!

s   Pathophysiology of Insulin Resistance James R. Gavin III, MD, PhD. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/442813_9
                                                                                                                 22
Here’s more evidence of genetic cause
                                            Relatives of diabetics often have
                                            IR – even if not obese1 and even
                                            if not hyperglycemic.2
1. Warram JH, Martin BC, Krowelski AS, et al. Slow glucose removal rate and hyperinsulinemia
precede the development of type II diabetes in the offspring of diabetic parents. Ann Intern Med
1990; 113:909–915.
2. Pratipanawatr W, Pratipanawatr T, Cusi k, Berria R, Adams JM, Jenkinson CP, Maezono K,
DeFronzo RA, Mandarino LJ, 2001. Skeletal muscle insulin resistance in normoglycemic subjects with
a strong family history of type 2 diabetes is associated with decreased insulin-stimulated insulin
receptor substrate-1 tyrosine phosphorylation. Diabetes 50, 2572-2578.



         Twins often both have IR.
   Lehtovirta M, Kaprio J, Forsblom C, et al. Insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion in
   monozygotic and dizygotic twins. Diabetologia 2000; 43:285–293.




                        Some ethnic groups have insulin
                        resistance, e.g. Pima Indians
                                      So, if you’ve got it, it may not be all your fault.
                                                                                                     23
Any of the following single gene defects
                   will cause diabetes:
• A defect in the key (i.e. the insulin molecule) or in
  the beta cell insulin secreting mechanism.
     • For example, defective proinsulin or insulin genes, genes that code
       mitochondrial enzymes in beta cells needed to produce ATP to
       depolarize the beta cell and cause insulin release, and defects in
       several other beta cell genes (e.g. for glucokinase needed to
       provide G-6-P for mitochondria and thus precursor for cell
       depolization and insulin release) that give rise to maturity-onset –
       (manifesting before age 25) diabetes of the young (MODY).
• Defects in the lock (i.e. the insulin receptor)
     •   Reduced manufacture of lock. Class 1 diabetes
     •   Poor transport of lock to cell surface. Class 2 diabetes
     •   Dysfunctional lock – key won’t fit. Class 3 diabetes
     •   Poor lock functioning (signaling thru tyrosine kinase). Class 4
     •   Increased breakdown and recycling of lock. Class 5
                                               We see defective insulin receptors in
Monogenic causes of IR and
                                               Type A Insulin Resistance
diabetes however are rare!
                                               Leprechaumism
Reviewed in Williams Textbook of Endocrinology 10th
ed pp 1430-1432. & 11th ed.                         Rabson-Mendenhall Syndrome         24
A number of enzymes are probably involved in the more
                  common types of type 2 diabetes


• One of the most promising under study is Calpain 10.
• Calpain, discovered in 1976, is an intracellular enzyme
  that cleaves proteins containing cysteine (an amino
  acid containing sulfur). Its name comes from its
  similarity to two other enzymes: calmodulin and
  papain. Like calmodulin, calpain requires calcium to
  be activated.
• If calpain 10 is inhibited, the result is insulin
  resistance and impaired insulin secretion in response
  to glucose.



Zhou, Y-P, et al. Calpain inhibitors impair insulin secretion after 48-hours: a model
for beta-cell dysfunction in type 2 diabetes? Diabetes 2000. 49:A80
Seamus, K, et al. Calpain-sensitive pathways in insulin secretion and action: a
pathophysiological basis for type 2 diabetes? Diabetes 2000. 49:A62.
                                                                                        25
We too may cause IR …




   If we look like this.
                           26
Did you know that it’s not obesity per se that’s
                                            related to IR.
                                                     It’s abdominal size.




                       The bigger in the belly you are, the less you can use insulin.
A, From Fujimoto WY, Bergstrom RW, Boyko EJ, et al. Obesity Res 1995; Suppl 2:1795–1863; B, from Kahn SE, Prigeon
RL, McCulloch DK, et al. Quantification of the relationship between insulin sensitivity and beta-cell function in human
subjects: evidence for a hyperbolic function. Diabetes 1993; 42:1663–1672.)                                               27
It’s worse to be
           an apple than a pear



                      Sorry!




Apple-shaped people have more intra-abdominal
      fat than pear-shaped folk. Look…
                                                28
Most fat, about
80%, is
subcutaneous:
just under the
skin.

Visceral fat is
the fat around
internal organs.
On average, it’s
only about 10%
of body fat.

Two people of
the same weight,
can have very
different amounts
and types of fat.



                    29
Why is central
                     obesity worse than
                     subcutaneous fat?
                      It leaks more fat!
and elevated free fatty acids predicts the progression to diabetes.
TECHY STUFF: 1. Central fat has more adrenergic receptors and when stimulated by
epinephrine, hormone sensitive lipase is activated which breaks down fat releasing it
to the blood stream. (See: Arner P, Hellstrom L, Wahrenberg H, Bronnegard M. Beta-adrenoceptor
expression in human fat cells from different regions. J Clin Invest 1990; 86:1595–1600. Nicklas BJ, Rogus EM,
Colman EG, Goldberg AP. Visceral adiposity, increased adipocyte lipolysis, and metabolic dysfunction in obese
postmenopausal women. Am J Physiol 1996; 270:E72–E78. )
2. Central fat is also resistant to insulin’s ability to inhibit lipolysis.
Note: 80% of diabetics are overweight with visceral obesity and thus have higher day-long
elevations of FFA. (See: Reaven GM, Hollenback C, Jeng C-Y, Wu MS, Chen Y-DI, 1988. Measurement of plasma glucose,
free fatty acid, lactate, and insulin for 24 hours in patients with NIDDM. Diabetes, 37, 1020-1024.)
3. Part of this is because of an increase in fat mass                 (Jensen MD, Haymond MW, Rizza RA, Cryer PE, Miles JM,
1989. Influence of body fat distribution on free fatty acid metabolism in obesity. J Clin Invest. 83,1168-1173)               30
Note: Most fats in the blood (99.9%) are bound to albumin.
Only a tiny amount are free (unbound). The levels of "free fatty
acid" in the blood are limited by the number of albumin
binding sites available.




                                                                   31
Where do the free fatty acids we find in plasma come from?


 As I said, much of                                         Another source of
 the free fatty acids
                                                            plasma free fatty
 in blood plasma
 originate from the                                         acids are the
 triacylglyceride                                           phospholipid
                                                            membranes of cells,
 (TAG) stored in fat
                                                            whose fat is released
 cells which are                                            into blood by the
 regularly broken                                           enzyme
 down by lipolysis.
                                                            phospholipase A2.
                  By the way, lipolysis from TAG favors
                  unsaturated and short chained fatty acids.
                  The most mobile is eicosapentenoic acid
                  (C20:5n-3) and arachadonic acid (C20:4n-6).
        Diet is not an immediate source of FFA in blood, rather diet supplies
        the fat found in fat cells and the phospholipid membrane.
                                            Leaf, 2001 Circulation 104, 744-745.
                                                                                   32
As there is very, very little
            FFA in blood




• Only micrograms per liter – as FFA don’t like the
  aqueous blood environment.
• By contrast there are grams of bound fat per liter
  –usually expressed as mg/dl of blood.
• Measuring FFA is not a common practice.
         Leaf, 2001 Circulation 104, 744-745.
                                                       33
There are four ways more FFA can
                               get into circulation.
1.   If there is more fat mass over
     which lipolysis can occur.
2.   If subjects are stressed,
     norepinephrine triggers a
     sequence that activates
          hormone sensitive lipase
          (HSL) in fat cells
     to break down triglycerides (TG).

3.   If there’s less insulin or resistance
     to insulin – as insulin has an
     antilipolytic effect on the same
     process. (Salaranta and Groop 1996:
     Diabetes Metabolism Review 12:15-36.)          From Holm 2003, Biochemical Society
     .                                                 Transactions Volume 31, part 6.
4.   If there is decreased uptake or
     oxidation of FFA (Colberg et al 1995, J
     Clin Investigation 95:1846-1853)

          Now, the trouble is: Obese people suffer all four of these conditions.          34
Is there evidence that FFA causes IR?




                                        35
Yes! Insulin resistance can be
induced in young healthy people
without diabetes in a matter of hours,
by simply exposing them to IV lipid
solutions (e.g. a 10% safflower oil
and 10% soy bean oil emulsion) while
keeping glucose and insulin levels
steady.
What happens is that lipid replaces
carbohydrate as fuel within a few
hours. FFA builds up in muscle,
glucose is not oxidized, and
glycogen synthesis is dramatically
reduced, (Boden et al, 1991 J. Clin.
Invest. 88:960-966. Roden et al, 1996.
J. Clin. Invest 97:2859-2865.)



                                         36
So how does increased FFA
   cause insulin resistance?




Adapted from discussion in Williams 10th & 11th ed. Textbook of Endrocrinology and other referenced sources


                                                                                                              37
• Well, the first hypothesis – which is
  partially correct – is called the
  Randle Hypothesis(Randle et al, 1963. Lancet 1: 785-789).
• It says that If tissue energy needs are
  being met by burning fat, muscle
  cells will not need glucose and will
  move to decrease its uptake. Thus,
  glucose will build up.
• Here’s the best current theory…


                                                          38
Free fatty acids are of different
                   types and shapes




Sometimes we              Sometimes like this.
symbolize them like
this.                     And other ways too…
                                                 39
We need something simpler for this
 presentation, let’s use just one
        shape and call it…




              Fat




                                     40
The “free” fat that “leaks” from belly fat
                          is delivered to muscle cells in our blood.
                          We’ll start simply with one fat molecule.
With excess plasma
FFA, the fat is stored
in muscle (and liver)
as triglycerides which
are in a state of
constant turn over in
the cell back to FFA
(Goodpaster et al 2000 Am J
                                        Fat
Clin Nutrition 71:885-892. and
Bays J Clin Endocrinology and                              Nucleus
Met 2004 89(2) 463-478).




                                                   Muscle cell
           Transfer of the free fatty acid (FFA) into the cell is facilitated by fatty acid
           binding protein –plasma membrane (FABP-pm). Other enzymes may also be
           involved, like fatty acid translocase and FA transport protein.                    41
Once in the cell, small chain fats diffuse into the
                       mitochondria, but those over 10 carbons (which is
                       most) must be taken up by two enzymes on the
                       outer surface of the mitochondria that are
                       throughout the cell

                                                                 M
                                                                           M           M

                                                    Fat
                                                          M
                                                                           Nucleus



                                                              Muscle cell
The first mitochondrial enzyme is called Acyl-CoA synthetase (or fatty acyl-CoA synthetase) and it’s also found on
endoplasmic reticulum. The product of FFA and acyl-CoA synthase is fatty acyl-Co-A. This is then taken up by a
second enzyme on the outer mitochondrial surface that requires carnitine to work. It’s called Carnitine Palmitoyl
Transferase (CPT-1). The result is acyl-carnitine, which a second CPT enzyme (CPT-2) in the inner mitochondrial
membrane converts back to acyl-CoA, recovering the carnitine. The fatty acyl –coA is now inside the
mitochondria and can proceed to Beta oxidation. The reaction is at Appendix 1. More information follows...
                                                                                                                42
Now, the mitochondria is amazing




It’s the   boiler-room of the cell   43
Look, here’s one inside a cell

     After a




                                               Fat
     meal, here’s




                            Sugar
     what
     happens:
Fats and
sugars move                                     Beta
into the cell.                                  Oxida-
                                                tion
Sugars are
                                    Citric
digested to                         Acid
acetyl coA in                       Cycle
the cytoplasm.
   Then fat and
   acetyl –coA
   enter the
   mitochondria.    Sugars are broken down through glycolysis in the cytoplasm to acetyl-Co-A.
                    Short and medium chain FA diffuse across the mitochondrial membrane, but those longer than
                    C10 must be transported by carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT-1) which resides on the outer
                    mitochondrial membrane –see diagram at Appendix 1 .
                    On the inner mitochondrial membrane fats are broken down by CPT II and a complex of enzymes
                    which vary depending on chain length.                                                     44
In the                            Fats
mitochondria,
fats are digested
in the beta                                   Beta
oxidation                                     Oxida-
                                              tion
cycle.
                                   Citric
If you pay me a                    Acid
dollar, I’ll show                  Cycle

you the cycle.
Pay here.


        The product of beta oxidation is acetyl CoA (a 2 carbon unit – attached to CoA), the
        same product of glycolysis in the cytosol.

        Acetyl CoA from both sources then enters the citric acid cycle                Pay here to see.
         The citric acid cycle is also known as the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) or Krebs cycle
                                                                                                         45
Fats
Sugars

                       Beta
                       Oxida-
                       tion

              Citric
              Acid
              Cycle




Thus, both fats and sugars are fuel for the citric acid cycle which
eventually makes energy (ATP molecules) for the body - some of
which were used to transport long-chain fatty acids into the
mitochondria. (Acyl-CoA synthetase requires ATP to make acyl CoA.)
                                                                      46
But what happens if you
                                                      have too much fat and sugar
                                                      enter the citric acid cycle?

                      Fat
                                         citrate


                       Sugar
                                                       The citric acid cycle starts
            Product
               8
                               Product
                                  1
                                                       working fast.

Product                                     Product    But some steps happen
   7                                           2
                                                       faster than others, so some
          Citric Acid Cycle                            products build up at the
                                                       slower steps.
Product                                     Product
   6                                           3

                                                      One build-up product of
                                                      particular note is “product 1”
           Product             Product
              5                   4                   which is called “citrate.”

          Appendix 3: The CAC chemical names
                                                                                       47
Once made, citrate




                                                            Fat
          can flow back into
          the cytoplasm.
          and through a
          series of steps,
          shut off the
          mitochondrial
          membrane                                   citrate
          enzyme, CPT-1                                Citric
          (Remember that?)                             Acid
                                                       Cycle
        So that long-
        chained fats can no
        longer get into the
        mitochodria!
           Now that would make sense. It would slow down the fuel supply
           so things can work at normal pace.
Citrate activates the enzyme acetyl CoA carboxylase, which catalyzes the conversion of acetyl CoA to malonyly-CoA. Malonyl CoA is
a potent inhibitor of CPT-1. See the reaction at Appendix 4. Bavenholm PN, Pigon J, Saha AK, et al. Fatty acid oxidation and the
regulation of malonyl-CoA in human muscle. Diabetes 2000; 49:1078–1083. Ruderman NB, Saha AK, Vavvas D, Witters LA. Malonyl-
CoA, fuel sensing, and insulin resistance. Am J Physiol 1999; 276:E1–E18.                                                        48
Fat

                                                                      Fat
                                                  Fat

                                                          Fat
    The trouble is
    that now fat                                                  Glycerol
    starts to build                            Glycerol
    up in the muscle
    cytoplasm.
    speeding up the
    process of forming
    intracellular TAG.                       Citric
                                             Acid
                                             Cycle

The accumulation of TAG in the muscle
may not by itself be harmful (Boden and
Laakso 2004. Diabetes Care 27(9) 2253-987) . Rather, it
is probably one of the intermediary
products on the way to forming TAG
that causes problems, it is called diacyl
glycerol (DAG).
                       And it is often inserted into the cell membrane.      49
It may help to recall that the cell membrane
                                 actually looks more like this




                                 Fat
                                       Fat

                                 Glycerol



So it’s easy for diacyl glycerol (DAG) to slide in.
                                                                         50
But excess DAG is not good!
DAG activates one of the forms of the enzyme Protein Kinase C – Calcium and DAG
                     dependent activation are shown below




The enzyme isoform is membrane-bound Protein Kinase C theta (PKC ), one of at least 12 forms of PKC. A protein kinase is an
enzyme that transfers a phosphate group from a donor molecule (usually ATP) to an amino acid residue of a protein. Most
protein kinases can only phosphorylate one kind of amino acid. PKC phosphorylates two: serine and threonine.
Phosphorylation can activate or inhibit an enzyme. PKC activation occurs with binding of diacylglycerol (DAG), often in the
presence of calcium (released from the sacroplasmic reticulum by inositol triphosphate –a sugar molecule) - though PKC theta
does not require it - resulting in translocation of the PKC-DAG complex to the cell membrane where it is active and activates
other signaling molecules. The whole reaction can be seen at Appendix 5. The exact mechanism whereby fat activates PKC is
not known; it may not be through citrate. The effect of activating PKC is a reduction in insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1)
and phosphatidylionositol-3, required in translocating glucose transporter to the cell surface. The result is hyperglycemia. Good
review at Boden G and Shulman GI, 2002. Free fatty acids in obesity and type 2 diabetes: defining their role in the development
of insulin resistance and β-cell dysfunction. European Journal of Clinical Investigation (2002) 32 (Suppl. 3), 14–23.
                                                                                                                              51
Once activated, PKC phosphorylates the
 MAPK protein and can also (next slide)
  phosphorylate the insulin receptor




                                          52
Here’s what’s going on at the insulin receptor

                    •   Normally, insulin binds to the
                        extracellular alpha-subunits
                    •   This activates the beta-subunits,
                        which become autophosphorylated
                        at tyrosine residues. (Thus the beta
                        unit is a tyrosine kinase.)
                    •   Seven intracellular tyrosines become
                        autophosphorylated in response to
                        insulin binding.
                    •   This causes a 200-fold increase in
                        catalytic activity.
                    •   However, if the Insulin Receptor is
                        phosphorylated by Protein Kinase C
                        –induced by excess fats -
                        phosphorylation occurs at a serine
                        or threonine amino acid and insulin
                        action is inhibited.
                    •   The result is less IRS-1 and
                        phosphatidylionositol-3, and thus
                        ultimately fewer GLUT 4s are
                        transported to the surface..
                                                               53
Here’s a little more detail of what happens
                          below the insulin receptor.




                                    Insulin binding to receptor can either stimulate
                                    the PI(3)K or the MAP kinase pathway.

But if excess blood fat (DAG) stimulates PKC then both the insulin receptor is
inhibited and the MAP kinase pathway is favored over the PI(3)K pathway and its
products, like glucose transporters.
                                                                                  54
Here’s
another
view.




          55
So glucose builds up
                                                            Here’s the fats (NEFA) coming into
in the blood.
                                                            or building up in the cell.

         PKC alters                                          They are first                   A simplified
                                                                                              version of the
         the insulin                                         turned into fatty
         receptor,
                                                             acyl-Co-A, then
         inactivating
         it.                                                 DAG.                             whole process
    It also inhibits                                                                          is shown here
    IRS-1 and as a                                                                              From: Hulver MW and Dohm
    consequence,                                                                                GL, 2004. The molecular
    GLUT 4, “the                                                                                mechanism linking muscle fat
                                                                                                accumulation to
    cell door” for                                                                              insulin resistance. Proceedings
    glucose, is not                Both DAG and                                                 of the Nutrition Society (2004),
                                                                          Though it’s not
    made and                       fatty acyl co-A                        shown, FFA            63, 375–380.
    transported. To                can activate
                                                                          also increase
                                                                          oxidative stress    Note that increased NEFA leads
    the cell
    surface.
                                   Protein Kinase C.                      and the             to increased fatty acyl-CoA and
                                                                          resulting           also leads to increased
                                                                          reactive            ceramide (a fat derived from cell
                                                                          oxygen species
                                                                                              membrane – see Appendix 6
                                                                          can activate
                                                                          PKC (see
                                                                                              here for more information.)
                                                                          Boden and           which has a negative effect on
                                                                          Laakso, 2004)       Akt and thus a negatiove affect
       The unsimplified process is a bit overwhelming..see                                    on GLUT 4 translocation. Here’
                                                                                              I’ll show you…


               Fig. 3. Some of the cellular mechanisms that link intramyocellular lipid accumulation with insulin
               resistance. DAG, diacylglycerols; TAG, triacylglycerols; IRS-1, insulin receptor substrate 1; PI3K,
               phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; PDK, phosphatidylinositol-dependent kinase; akt/PKB, protein kinase B;
               PKC, protein kinase C; aPKC, atypical protein kinase C; PPase, protein phosphatase; CPT-1, carnitine
               palmitoyltransferase 1; (+), activation; (–), inhibition.
                                                                                                                                   56
57
And that’s the amazing and perhaps true story of how having
too much visceral fat may cause
Insulin Resistance and diabetes!!!! in muscle.


                          There is, of course, debate over the visceral
                          obesity causes IR hypothesis. Miles and Jensen
                          (2005) for example thinks subcutaneous fat is
                          the main contributor to FFA and IR - see
                          Diabetes Care 28(9) 2326-2328.

                                                                       58
But it’s probably not intramuscular FFA that is the problem
    - per se. For example:




Endurance trained athletes have high intramuscular TAG, but
don’t have IR. (Goodpaster et al 2001 J Clin Endocrin Metab
86:5755-5761.)

SO, IR SEEMS TO OCCUR WHEN THE
INTRAMUSCULAR FAT ISN’T OXIDIZED
FAST ENOUGH.
                                                                  59
And that leads to another hypothesis…Maybe the cause
of IR is some defect in mitochondrial functioning? (see
Schrauwen’s 2007 review in J Clin Endocrin and Metab
92(4): 1229-1231.




   www.odranoel.eu/Images/Mitochondria%20red%20i..
   .
                                                          60
It could be too few mitochondria
                                              •   As you’ve seen, the number of mitochondria would be
                                                  important in energy balance. The more mitochondria the
                                                  more fats and sugars you could burn so they wouldn’t
                                                  build up to activate PKC.
                                              •   People with Insulin Resistance have fewer mitochondria,
Type 1 fibers are light, Type 2 are dark in       and have more Type 2 muscle fibers than Type 1 muscle
this stained slide.                               fibers in relation to normal subjects (Diabetes 2005 54:8-14.)
                  TYPE 1      TYPE 2
                                              •
 CHARACTERISTIC
                  Muscle      Muscle              Type 2 muscle fibers have fewer mitochondria and favor
 Contraction      Slow        Fast
                                                  glycolysis as opposed to TCA cycle oxidation.
                                              •   A number of proteins regulate the number of
 Color            Red         White
                                                  mitochodria.
 Oxidation        High        Low
                                              •   Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)
 Glycolysis       Low         High
                                                  gamma– coactivator 1a and 1b - say that three times fast!
 Mitochondria     Abundant    Sparse              - is one that is currently being researched. The name is
 ATPase, pH
                                                  often shortened to PGC-1a and PGC-1b in the literature.
                  Light       Dark                PPAR gamma, by the way, is a receptor on the cell nucleus of a variety of tissues
 9.4
                                                  (heart, muscle, colon, kidney, pancreas, and spleen , fat cells, and macrophages)
 ATPase, pH
 4.3
                  Dark        Light
                                              •   Trouble is, we don’t know if the number of mitochondria
 NADH-TR          Dark        Light               (and their promoters) is a cause or effect of IR. (Note:
 SDH              Dark        Light               insulin stimulation up-regulates mitochondria.) In
 COX              Dark        Light               addition, muscle types may be inherited or acquired -
 Glycogen         Scant       Abundant            exercise changes muscle type patterns.
                                                                                                                                      61
It could be dysfunctional
                                mitochondria
Subjects with IR                                                      They also have
or diabetes have                                                      reduced amounts of
a reduced                                                             a inner mitochondrial
number of genes                                                       membrane protein
responsive to                                                         (uncoupling protein-
PGC-1a that                                                           3, UCP-3) that
code for oxidative                                                    moves fatty acids
metabolism.                                                           from the
(Mootha et al 2003 Nat                                                mitochondria to the
Genet 34:267-273. Patti                                               cytosol to protect the
et al, 2003, Proc Nat’l
Acad Sci USA 100:8466-                                                mitochondria from
8471.).                                                               accumulation of
                                                                      NEFA. (Schrauwen et al The
                                                                      FASEB Journal. 2001;15:2497-
                                                                      2502.) and Schrauwen and
                                                                      Hesselink, 2004. Diabetes
                                                                      53:1412-1417.)

      • But are these causes of IR or the effects of FFA/IR?
           (Roden 2005 Int J Obes (London) 29 (Suppl 2) S111-S115.)                                  62
Mitochondrial maladies may be behind the often reported
                tiredness diabetics suffer.

      YOU’D BE TIRED TOO IF YOUR
MITOCHONDRIA WEREN’T WORKING RIGHT!

                                                           63
The most simple etiological explanations
                   for IR is simply too much sugar
                (hyperglycemia) or too much insulin.
• Decrease sugar intake and you decrease IR and diabetes.
  This has been proven among Pima Indians.
• High levels of glucose (200 mg/dL and above) causes
  defective action of insulin in skeletal muscle (which fails
  to take up glucose) and liver (which overproduces
  glucose). Thus excess glucose causes even greater
  glucose. (Sheenan, 2008. New Mechanism of Glucose
  Control)
• If you take normal subjects and subject them to high
  insulin levels for 24-72 hours, insulin receptors will be
  downregulated and the post receptor bonding pathways
  will not work well. Insulin will lose the ability to increase
  nonoxidative (i.e. glycolytic) glucose disposal and will
  also lose the ability to make glycogen –thus providing a
  means to diabetes. See Williams (2008).
            Some other hypotheses are in the Appendix 7 – Press here   64
Note:
        The American Diabetes Association
                  recently said


“…there is little evidence that total carbohydrate intake is
  associated with the development of type 2 diabetes.”
But the studies they cite don’t conclude this.

• Two are by Salmeron and colleagues in 1997.
   • One in Diabetes Care concludes for men:
      • “These findings support the hypothesis that diets with a
        high glycemic load and low cereal fiber content increase
        risk of NIDDM in men. Further, they suggest that grains
        should be consumed in a minimally processed form to
        reduce the incidence of NIDDM.”
   • The other in JAMA makes the same conclusion for
     women.
• One was conducted in Sweden and found no
  association between dietary intake and
  developing diabetes – but the Swedish diet is
  different than ours.
• The last one was by Coditz et al, 1992. This one
  found “…no association between intakes of
  energy, protein, sucrose, carbohydrate, or fiber
  and risk of diabetes.” But, they controlled for
  BMI. What if the effects are through BMI?
OK, you’ve looked at how excess fatty acids affect muscle.

WHAT ABOUT OTHER TISSUES?


                                                             67
Insulin resistance also develops in




        fat cells

      In much the same way as muscle cells.



                                              68
Recall that Insulin lets things in –
                    not out
                           As with muscle cells,
                           insulin opens the cell
                           doors after a meal to
                Sugar      let sugar in

                          The sugar that is let in
                          is turned into fat.
Fat
& more                  In addition, insulin also lets fat
                        in, which is also stored as fat.
              Fat
                        and it won’t let fat out (it
                        inhibits lipolysis).



                                                         69
But, if insulin resistance develops
Sugars can                                    Sugars
no longer get
into fat cells                                                Sugars
(no GLUT
                                                   Sugars
transporter),
nor can fats
(as carnitine
                                                              Fats
palmitoyltran
sferase, CPT-                                          Fats
1, is down-
regulated) so
both build up                                      Fats
in the blood
stream.
              The fats are in the form of free fatty acids

       In addition, in insulin resistance, fat cells have increased
       lipolysis, resulting leaking higher levels of free fatty acids.

                                                                         70
Now note the hyperglycemic effects downstream

• You just saw how insulin resistance
  in fat cells cause an increase in FFA.
  This causes:
   • Increased FFA oxidation in muscle,
     leading to more insulin resistance and
     hyperglycemia –as it did with muscle.
  Reviewed in Sheenan, 2008




               It’s a spiral of worsening effects!

                                                     71
There are other peculiar fat cell effects in diabetes.
•   In type 2 diabetes, preadipocytes, mainly in visceral fat, do not mature
    properly to adipocytes.
•   These preadipocytes are not very insulin-sensitive and do not secrete an anti-
    inflammatory cytokine called adiponectin –which is only secreted by fat cells
    and levels of which are inversely correlated with body fat percentage in adults.




• Rather, they are hypertrophic (swollen) and secrete proinflammatory cytokines,
  especially tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-6 (IL-6).
• Because these immature fat cells, won’t grow up: diabetics suffer global
  inflammation.
     Insulin has a variety of adipose effects: It causes pre-adipocytes to mature into adipocytes. In
     addition, it stimulates glucose transport and triglyceride synthesis (lipogenesis). It also inhibits
     lipolysis and increases fatty acid uptake by stimulating LPL activity in fat. Kahn BB and Flier JS,
     2000. Obesity and insulin resistance. The Journal of Clinical Investigation 106(4). 473-481. See
     Appendix 8 for notes on how insulin inhibits lipolysis.                                              72
OK, now we’ll look at FFA and the liver




                                          73
One of liver’s main jobs is to keep
  blood glucose levels steady.

  Liver   Usually this is a simple process
              When blood sugar is low, the
              liver makes and releases glucose.
              Liver can release glucose either by releasing stored glucose (i.e.
              glycogen) or making glucose in a process called gluconeogenesis.
              To break down glycogen, low blood sugar triggers alpha cells in
              the pancreas to release a hormone called glucagon. Glucagon binds
              to receptors on the liver causing cAMP to be released. (To see the
              reaction, press here > Appendix 9) After several steps, this activates
              glycogen phosphorylase to initiate the breakdown of stored
              glycogen. To make glucose (to see the reaction press here:
              Appendix 2) three substrates (pyruvate, oxaloacetate or glycerol )
   Pancreas   and three enzymes: PEPCK, G-6_Pase, and fructose-1,6-
              bisphosphatase are needed Genetic expression of the first two
              enzymes can be induced by glucagon – if fasting (ie. low blood
              sugar), glucocorticoids (cortisone and cortisol) -if under stress, or
              catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine, and dopamine) - by
              exercise. Growth hormone secreted by the pituitary and cortisol
              also inhibit the uptake of glucose by muscle and fat. Epinephrine
              activates glycogen breakdown in the same way as glucagon –as
              shown in the Appendix 1. Barthel A and Schmoll D, 2003. Novel
              concepts in insulin regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis. Am J
              Physiol Endocrinol Metab 285: E685–E692
                                                                                   74
One of liver’s main jobs is to keep
  blood glucose levels steady.

  Liver          When blood sugar is high after
                 a meal, it responds to both the
                 sugar and the insulin by
                 stopping gluconeogenesis.
                 (Ferrannini et al 1988 Metabolism 37:79-85.

              It also absorbs about a third of the
              carbohydrate from the meal. Ferrannini op cit.

              Liver is freely permeable to blood sugar (unlike muscle). High blood
              sugar normally triggers beta cells in the pancreas to release insulin.
   Pancreas   Insulin binds to receptors on the liver (and muscle – as we saw)
              causing glucose uptake in liver (and muscle).
              As glucose is taken into liver cells it binds to and inhibits glycogen
              phosphorylase - which normally breaks down stored starch) The result
              is that glycogen is not broken down and sugar (glucose) is not
              released into blood. Instead, glucose is stored as glycogen in the
              liver. As glucose is not added to blood, glucose levels return to
              normal. Hepatic glucose activates glucose kinase to convert glucose to
              G-6-P. G-6-P is converted to G-1-P by phosphoglucomutase and is
              then converted to glycogen.
                                                                                   75
Here’s a nice diagram of the process
 To “see” the
                                                              With low blood
 normal process,
                                                              sugar follow the
 start with high
                                                              blue arrows.
 blood sugar (at
 top) and follow
                                                             Low blood sugar
 the yellow
                                                             causes pancreatic
 arrows.
                                                             release of glucagon
High blood                                                   which causes the
sugar causes                                                 liver to breakdown
pancreatic                                                   glycogen and raise
secretion of                                                 blood sugar to
insulin which                                                normal levels.
causes liver to
store glucose                                               Glucagon works the
(make glycogen)                                             exact opposite of
and help restore                                            insulin – it releases
blood sugar                                                 glucose.
levels.          health.howstuffworks.com/diabetes1.htm
  Trouble is: In Insulin Resistance, glucagon is continually released, causing
  glucose to be released, and this adds to the already accumulating hyperglycemia
  due to insulin resistance. It’s bad on top of bad.
                                                                                    76
Note also what happens when there’s excess FFA around?

1.    Heapatic FFA uptake is increased by mass action, leading
      to increased FFA oxidation, leading to increased acetyl
      CoA which stimulates the two rate limiting enzymes* in
      gluconeogenesis while providing ATP for forming more
      glucose.
            * Pyruvate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate
                Exton et al, 1966 J Biol Chem 244 4095-4102;
                Bahl et al, 1997 Biochem pharmacol 53, 67-74.
2.    FFAs also increase the activity of the enzyme that
      controls the release of glucose from the liver.
                        Glucose-6-phosphatase
                   Massillon et al 1996. Diabetes 46 153-157.

3.     FFAs also interfere with the insulin receptor on liver,
       resulting in the inability of insulin to stop
       gluconeogenesis. Lam et al 2003 Am J Physiol 284 E863-E873.
     Together, these effects can increase plasma glucose at a time when the
           liver should be removing glucose. More terrible news!!

                                                                              77
Here’s a final terrible blow
• In insulin resistance the liver over secretes VLDL
  –which is of course triglyceride rich.
• Triglycerides are an independent risk factor for
  heart disease.
• Further, the increased lipid production within
  liver leads to a pathologic condition known as
  “fatty liver.”
                                               In severe fatty liver, fat comprises
                                               as much as 40% of the liver’s
                                               weight (as opposed to 5% in a
                                               normal liver), and the weight of the
                                               liver may increase from 3.31 lb (1.5
                                               kg) to as much as 11 lb (4.9 kg).
                                               Minimal fatty changes are
                                               temporary and asymptomatic;
                                               severe or persistent changes may
                                               cause liver dysfunction. Fatty liver
                                               is usually reversible by simply
                                               eliminating the cause –usually
                                               alcohol, obesity, malnutrition,
                                               diabetes, Cushing’s syndrome,
                                               hepatotoxins …
    Normal,   fatty   and   cirrhotic liver.
                                                                                  78
We return now to where we started – with
pancreatic beta cells – which make insulin.




  What is the effect of FFA on the pancreas?
                                               79
• We already know that elevated Plasma
  FFAs predict the development of glucose
  intolerance and diabetes                                        (Charles et al, 1997. Diabetologia 40:1101-1106.)




      http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/images/cholesterol.jpg




                                                                                                                  80
But what do we know about FFAs and the pancreas?

1. We know that short-term (acute) elevations of FFAs (oleic, linoleic, lauric, or
   palmitic) when directly injected into the pancreas immediately stimulate
   insulin secretion (Crespin et al, 1973, J Clin Invest 52:1979-1984).
2. nsulin immediately




                                                                                 81
But what do we know about FFAs and the pancreas?

1. We know that after about 24 hours of fasting FFAs are the primary fuel
2. If then given a glucose challenge (at time 0) – as when we eat – the FFA
   augments the acute primary response release of preformed insulin…
3. But once insulin is released, it’s antilipolytic and clearing effect removes
   FFA
4. …and curtails any further co-stimulation of the beta cell. So, you don’t see
   the typical secondary response to glucose (McGarry and Dobbins, 1999)




                                                            5. During fasting
                                                               FFA are required
                                                               to maintain at
                                                               least a basal level
                                                               of insulin.
                                                            6. These seem to be
                                                               adaptive
                                                               functions of FFA
                                                               to fasting (McGarry
                                                              and Dobbin, 1999).


                                                                                   82
We also know that the more saturated and longer the FFA,
the greater the insulin response – while fasting to a
glucose challenge (McGarry & Dobbins 1999).




                                                       83
Our trouble is that we are not in an environment
where fasting is a regular occurrence. We are in
a food rich – especially saturated fat rich –
environment.

Thus, the adaptive effects of low levels of FFA
during fasting which act to enhance insulin
secretion and glucose absorption when the fast
is broken now works against us.

Long-term exposure of the pancreas to high
FFA – as you see with overweight – leads to
enhanced insulin secretion at low glucose
levels (giving higher basal insulin levels), but
suppression of making new insulin, and
impaired ability of beta cells to respond to high
glucose concentrations (McGarry and Dobbin, 1999;
Carpentier et al, 1999, Kashyap et al, 2003…). Thus,
increased FFA > decreased insulin secretion.
                  BUMMER!                              84
1.   We’ve also known since the late 1960s
     that if long chain FFA (oleic acid) is
     infused with infused glucose, the
     insulin levels are dramatically raised
     above glucose alone – and the rise in
     insulin is accompanied by falling
     glucose in healthy fasting dogs.
     Greenough et al 1967 Lancet ii 1334-1336.
2.   The increase in glucose-stimulated
     insulin release to short-term exposure
     to long chain FFA has now been
     demonstrated many times (e.g. Paolisso et
     al, 1996. Diabetologia 38:1295-1299).
3.   However, if the exposure to increased
     FFA (e.g. a twofold elevation) is longer
     than a day (in the studies sited, 48
     hours) in rats (Sako and Grill, 1990 Endocrinology
     127: 1580–1589) or healthy non-obese
     young men (e.g. Carpentier et al 1999. Am J
     Physiology 276: E1055-E1066) – the FFA induced
     augmented insulin response to
     glucose is lost.
                                                     85
•   If you are obese, but not diabetic, the
                                   ability of long-term administration of FFA
                                   to stimulate insulin release when
                                   challenged with glucose is markedly
                                   decreased. (Carpentier et al 2000 Diabetes 49 399-
                                   408.)
                               •   If, you are not diabetic and not obese
                                   (BMI 25, avg age 43) BUT, you have a
                                   first degree diabetic relative who is
                                   diabetic, the higher your plasma level of
                                   FFA, the less insulin you secrete in the
                                   first 10 minutes – the acute response
                                   (Paolisso et al, 1998).
                               •   The good news is that in this study if you
                                   treat with a drug (acipimox –a niacin
                                   derivative) that reduces FFA, the acute
                                   insulin response increases.

There is also evidence that FFA that are richer in saturated than
polyunsaturated fats have a greater decrease in insulin release
Stefan et al 2001 Hormone and Metabolism Research 33 :432-438.
                                                                                   86
OK here’s a good summary
Prolonged experimental elevation of
 plasma NEFA in humans reproduces
 the cardinal pathophysiological
 features of type 2 diabetes, including
 reduced insulinmediated glucose
 utilization, impaired glucose-
 mediated insulin secretion, and
 increased endogenous glucose
 production (10, 36, 39).



                                      87
SO, GIVEN ALL YOU’VE
LEARNED, WHAT MUST WE
DO TO IMPROVE THE
PUBLIC’S HEALTH?



                        88
Here’s my thoughts
1. We need more money for basic research; it’s
   hard to prevent and treat a disease that’s not
   understood.
2. More people need to know if they are insulin
   resistant – why wait until they are diabetic.
3. Assuming the FFA hypothesis is correct, we
   need to find ways to lower FFAs.
4. It would seem if we want to burn fat, we must
   limit or control insulin release – as insulin
   restricts lipolysis.




                                                    89
Stem Questions
1. T/F IR is commonly measured during routine physicals.

2. The prevalence of IR is…

3. The organ that detects sugar and makes insulin…

4. In Phase 2 IR is characterized by the following blood states…
5. In Phase 3 IR is characterized by the following blood states…

6. Insulin resistance is a disease of …
7. The pancreas will release insulin in response to which of the
    following
8. Ultimately IR is probably caused by …
9. The figure at left describes…
10. T/F IR is NOT always associated with obesity.




                                                                   90
Stem 2
11. Central obesity is worse than subcutaneous fat because…

12. Epinephrine, stimulates the following enzyme on central fat cells…
13. Which of the following explains how FFA in the blood can be increased:
    •   If there is more fat mass over which lipolysis can occur.
    •    If subjects are stressed, norepinephrine triggers a sequence that
         activates hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) in fat cells
     • If there’s less insulin or resistance to insulin – as insulin has an
         antilipolytic effect on the same process.
     • If there is decreased uptake or oxidation of FFA.
14. Excess FFA entering the mitochondria eventually causes insulin resistance
    by producing DAG. How?
15. DAG exerts its effects by activating an enzyme named…
16. PKC phosphorylating the insulin receptor results in …
17. Is Intramuscular FFA by itself a bad thing?




                                                                                91
Stem 3
18. PPAR gamma is…
19. As opposed to a disease of FFA, IR may be a malfunction of the following
    organelle…
20. A inner mitochondrial membrane protein of concern in mitochondrial
    dysfunction in IR is …
21. T/F According to the ADA “…there is little evidence that total
    carbohydrate intake is associated with the development of type 2
    diabetes.”
22. Besides muscle cells IR develops in …


23. Adiponectin is best described as…
24. Proinflammatory cytokines secreted by fat cells include…




                                                                          92
Stem 4
• The organ that makes, stores, and releases glucose into the
  blood when blood sugar is low is…
• low blood sugar triggers alpha cells in the pancreas to
  release a hormone called ________.
• Glucagon is made … ________.
• Glucagon acts to break down ___ in the liver.
• Glucagon stimulates making __- in the liver.
• Normally, as glucose is taken into liver cells it binds to and
  inhibits an enzyme named ____________ - which normally
  breaks down …stored starch – thus high glucose inhibits
  the beakdown of glucose.
• Excess FFA generally has the effect on liver of….
• The effect of excess FFA on pancreatic beta cells is




                                                               93
The End




          94

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test

  • 1. 601 version Images in this presentation may be subject to copyright. Thomas Tai-Seale, Dr.P.H. M.M.S.,M.P.H.,M.A. School of Rural Public Health Texas A&M Health Science Center 1
  • 2. is the inability of your muscle, fat, and liver cells to use insulin properly. 2
  • 3. How prevalent is IR? • Well, as the tests are not routine, no one seems to know for the general population, though the figure 25% is often used. • Among healthy (non-diabetic) 1st degree relatives of Type 2 diabetics, a good estimate is about 40%. Volek A and Ronn W, 1999. Experimental and Clinical Endocrinology and Diabetes 107, 140-147. 3
  • 4. 4
  • 5. Here’s the relationship of blood sugar levels and mortality Risk of mortality N= 25,364 > • Impaired fasting glucose is blood glucose levels 30 years old between 100-125 mg/dl. • ADA criteria for diabetes is >125 mg/dl.- this includes many who don’t know they have diabetes. Years DECODE Study Group Lancet 1999, 354: 617-621. 5
  • 6. So, let’s start at the beginning – where we’d like to stop this disease progression - and study (and to a much lesser degree in fat) 6
  • 7. Here’s a muscle cell in red. Note, it has a “lock.” The lock is the insulin receptor. The pancreas detects sugar (or some amino acids) Insulin receptor after a meal and makes insulin in response. Insulin Insulin is carried in the blood to the lock on the cell surface. This begins the process to bring a glucose transporting door to the cell surface and open it. Sugar enters and the muscle then uses it for fuel or stores it as glycogen. Technical mumbo jumbo: Insulin binding causes glucose transporters (GLUT4) stored in vesicles inside the cell to be slowly released (translocated) to the surface where they allow glucose in by diffusion. In the cell, glucose binds to and inhibits Muscle cell glycogen phosphorylase (the enzyme which breaks down glycogen). Within an hour of insulin removal, GLUT4 are largely restored to the cytoplasm by endocytosis in what are called “clatharin-coated pits.” For FFA insulin effects see Newgard & McGarry 1995, Ann Review Biochem 64,689-719 and McGarry 2002 Diabetes 51:7-18. 7
  • 8. Note: it’s not only malfunctioning But, what would happen receptors on muscle to the blood sugar level if that causes blood some of the locks were sugar to rise, the liver also produces damaged, as sugar keeps excess glucose in IR.coming in? Insulin receptors That’s right, blood sugar would rise as long as sugar has trouble getting into the cell. Insulin And what would happen to the insulin level? It too would rise in response to persistent sugar. In Phase 1 (a.k.a. early) IR, the extra insulin would open some doors, so Pancreas blood sugar and insulin would fall, and you wouldn’t’ test hyperglycemic or hyperinsulinemic even though some IR receptors are not working. Sad note: If you have relatives who are diabetic (like me), chances are good that your insulin receptors are not working well, even if you don’t test positive for hyperglycemia. Pratipanawatr W, Pratipanawatr T, Cusi K, Berria R, Adams JM, Jenkinson CP, Maezono K, DeFronzo RA, Mandarino LJ, 2001 Skeletal muscle insulin resistance in normoglycemic subjects with a strong family history of type 2 diabetes is associated with decreased insulin stimulated, insulin receptor substrate-1 tyrosine phosphorylation Diabetes 50, 2572-2578. Muscle cell 8
  • 9. In Phase 2 IR, there is increased insulin resistance, i.e. more locks are damaged, so blood sugar builds up Insulin receptors and your pancreas responds by making more insulin. Insulin The load of sugar, however, is too great, and the pancreas can’t produce enough insulin to reduce it. Pancreas You now test positive for BOTH Impaired Glucose Tolerance (glucose levels of 140 to 199 mg per dL (7.8 to 11.0 mmol) two-hours after you’ve had 75-g oral glucose) AND hyperinsulinemia. Increased IR in IGT - see: Tripathy D, Carlsson M, Almgren P, Isomaa B, Taskinen M-R, Tuomi T, Groop LC, 2000 Insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity in relation to glucose-tolerance. Lessons from the Botnia Study. Diabetes 49 975-980. Muscle cell 9
  • 10. In Phase 3 IR, IR stays the same, but… 10
  • 11. I’m sick of making all these keys for this …the pancreas crazy lock gets tired of Insulin having to make so much insulin. Pancreas In progressing from IGT to T2DM, IR does not change, but the pancreas wears out: Reaven GM, Holenbach CB, Chen YDI, 1989. Relationship between glucose tolerance, insulin secretion, and insulin action in non-obese individuals with varying degrees of glucose tolerance. Diabetologica 32:52-55. Bogardus C, Lillioja S, Howard BV, Reaven G, Mott D, 1984. Relationship between insulin secretion, insulin action, and fasting plasma glucose concentration in nondiabetic and noninsulin dependent diabetic subjects. J. Clinical Investigations, 74:1238-1246. Muscle cell 11
  • 12. I and quits making insulin. quit! You’d no longer be hyper-insulinemic, and you’d have to start buying your insulin at the drug store. You’d also begin to have to deal with the bad effects of all that excess sugar. Muscle cell 12
  • 13. So, IR (and thus diabetes) is a disease about broken insulin receptors (locks) that govern the inflow of glucose and fats (through doors) into muscle cells - and by a similar mechanism, but to a much lesser extent, into fat cells. It is also a disease about defective pancreatic beta cells. Note: It is still unknown if insulin resistance (broken locks) or defective insulin secretion (broken keys) is the primary defect leading to Type 2 diabetes, but both are present in early stages. –see Williams 11th ed, pp. 6-7 of the section on pathogenesis. 13
  • 14. Please note that in addition to removing sugar from the blood, insulin also clears Free Fatty Acids (a.k.a. non-esterified fatty acids, NEFA) from plasma – especially after a meal. Bonen et al, 2004. Regulation of fatty acid transport by fatty acid translocase/CD36. Proc Nutr Soc 63: 245–249. Miles et al. 2003 Nocturnal and postprandial free fatty acid kinetics in normal and type 2 diabetic subjects: effects of insulin sensitization therapy. Diabetes 52: 675–681, 2003. The main mechanism by which insulin does this is blocking the appearance of Free Fatty Acids (FFA) into the blood - by blocking lipolysis. Secondarily, it also removes FFA from the blood. Carpentier et al 2007. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 292: E693–E701. 14
  • 15. Is Insulin Resistance Bad Human Design? • Consider what it would do in times of food scarcity. • Insulin resistance would cause more glucose to be available to the brain –while muscles could run on fats. • Thus, it was probably originally adaptive (Landsberg 2006, Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology 33: 863-867.) Of course, that was before television! 15
  • 16. As you’ve seen, insulin is secreted in response to glucose. • It is also released in response to certain free amino acids – though this is not as well studied. • Initially, these were identified as arginine, leucine, and phenylalanine (Floyd et al 1966 J Clin Invest 45, 1487-1502; Floyd et al 1970 Diabetes 19, 102-108.) • More recent studies find that arginine, leucine, isoleucine, and alanine are particularly potent at stimulating beta cells (Bolea et al, 1997. Pflugers Arch 433:699-704.) • A 2006 review indicates that arginine, leucine, and alanine, stimulate insulin release (Newsholme et al Diabetes 55 Sup 2: S39-s47). • One amino acid, homocystein, inhibits insulin secretion. • Glutamine can only stimulate insulin release in the presence of glucose. • The ability of glutamate to stimulate insulin release is controversial. 16
  • 17. If, however, you give a protein or amino acid source AND a glucose source – the insulin secreting capacity of beta cells INCREASES! (Calbet & Maclean, 2002. J Nutr 132:2174-2182.) • As glucose levels drop as insulin rises – until late-stage diabetes – it may be possible to delay the onset of diabetes by ingestion of specific amino acids with meals (Van Loon et al 2003, Diabetes Care 26(3) 625-630). • This mixture would also stimulate protein synthesis and inhibit the breakdown of protein seen in diabetes (Van Loon et al 2003, Diabetes Care 26(3) 625-630). 17
  • 18. What about fatty acids and insulin release? • Up until recently, fatty acids have been thought not to cause insulin release, but to amplify the effect of glucose – if present – on insulin release. Warnotte et al 1994 Diabetes 43: 703-711. Parker et al 2003 Metabolism 52:1367-1371. • This view may be changing. 18
  • 19. The question we will consider next is: How do the keys and locks get broken? 19
  • 20. Well, sometimes, it’s genetic. Here, I’ll show you… 20
  • 21. First, let’s study the normal insulin response to sugar. The figure to the left shows what happens to insulin when glucose is infused – enough to maintain blood glucose levels two to three times the fasting level for an hour. Almost immediately after the glucose infusion begins, plasma insulin levels increase dramatically. This initial increase is due to secretion of preformed insulin, which in a few minutes is significantly depleted. The secondary rise in insulin reflects the considerable amount of newly synthesized insulin that is released after about 15 minutes. Clearly, elevated glucose not only simulates insulin secretion, but also transcription of the insulin gene and translation of its mRNA. 21
  • 22. N Insulin levels o w l Glucose levels o o k a These first 5 graphs show the insulin levels (from a OGTT) across a 20 year time series. t Those without genetic risk for diabetes are graphed in yellow. The pattern is steady. Those with a family history for type 2 diabetes are in orange/red. The pancreas begins to lose tha ability to make insulin after the third graph. The next 5 graphs are matched glucose levels (mmol/l) across the same time, for those t without genetic risk (yellow) and with risk (orange/red). The horizontal white line is the cut-point for diabetes. h Note: even at the start of the 20 year study (furthest left), those who are at risk have i elevated insulin levels, but they won’t be diagnosed with diabetes for a long time! s Pathophysiology of Insulin Resistance James R. Gavin III, MD, PhD. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/442813_9 22
  • 23. Here’s more evidence of genetic cause Relatives of diabetics often have IR – even if not obese1 and even if not hyperglycemic.2 1. Warram JH, Martin BC, Krowelski AS, et al. Slow glucose removal rate and hyperinsulinemia precede the development of type II diabetes in the offspring of diabetic parents. Ann Intern Med 1990; 113:909–915. 2. Pratipanawatr W, Pratipanawatr T, Cusi k, Berria R, Adams JM, Jenkinson CP, Maezono K, DeFronzo RA, Mandarino LJ, 2001. Skeletal muscle insulin resistance in normoglycemic subjects with a strong family history of type 2 diabetes is associated with decreased insulin-stimulated insulin receptor substrate-1 tyrosine phosphorylation. Diabetes 50, 2572-2578. Twins often both have IR. Lehtovirta M, Kaprio J, Forsblom C, et al. Insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion in monozygotic and dizygotic twins. Diabetologia 2000; 43:285–293. Some ethnic groups have insulin resistance, e.g. Pima Indians So, if you’ve got it, it may not be all your fault. 23
  • 24. Any of the following single gene defects will cause diabetes: • A defect in the key (i.e. the insulin molecule) or in the beta cell insulin secreting mechanism. • For example, defective proinsulin or insulin genes, genes that code mitochondrial enzymes in beta cells needed to produce ATP to depolarize the beta cell and cause insulin release, and defects in several other beta cell genes (e.g. for glucokinase needed to provide G-6-P for mitochondria and thus precursor for cell depolization and insulin release) that give rise to maturity-onset – (manifesting before age 25) diabetes of the young (MODY). • Defects in the lock (i.e. the insulin receptor) • Reduced manufacture of lock. Class 1 diabetes • Poor transport of lock to cell surface. Class 2 diabetes • Dysfunctional lock – key won’t fit. Class 3 diabetes • Poor lock functioning (signaling thru tyrosine kinase). Class 4 • Increased breakdown and recycling of lock. Class 5 We see defective insulin receptors in Monogenic causes of IR and Type A Insulin Resistance diabetes however are rare! Leprechaumism Reviewed in Williams Textbook of Endocrinology 10th ed pp 1430-1432. & 11th ed. Rabson-Mendenhall Syndrome 24
  • 25. A number of enzymes are probably involved in the more common types of type 2 diabetes • One of the most promising under study is Calpain 10. • Calpain, discovered in 1976, is an intracellular enzyme that cleaves proteins containing cysteine (an amino acid containing sulfur). Its name comes from its similarity to two other enzymes: calmodulin and papain. Like calmodulin, calpain requires calcium to be activated. • If calpain 10 is inhibited, the result is insulin resistance and impaired insulin secretion in response to glucose. Zhou, Y-P, et al. Calpain inhibitors impair insulin secretion after 48-hours: a model for beta-cell dysfunction in type 2 diabetes? Diabetes 2000. 49:A80 Seamus, K, et al. Calpain-sensitive pathways in insulin secretion and action: a pathophysiological basis for type 2 diabetes? Diabetes 2000. 49:A62. 25
  • 26. We too may cause IR … If we look like this. 26
  • 27. Did you know that it’s not obesity per se that’s related to IR. It’s abdominal size. The bigger in the belly you are, the less you can use insulin. A, From Fujimoto WY, Bergstrom RW, Boyko EJ, et al. Obesity Res 1995; Suppl 2:1795–1863; B, from Kahn SE, Prigeon RL, McCulloch DK, et al. Quantification of the relationship between insulin sensitivity and beta-cell function in human subjects: evidence for a hyperbolic function. Diabetes 1993; 42:1663–1672.) 27
  • 28. It’s worse to be an apple than a pear Sorry! Apple-shaped people have more intra-abdominal fat than pear-shaped folk. Look… 28
  • 29. Most fat, about 80%, is subcutaneous: just under the skin. Visceral fat is the fat around internal organs. On average, it’s only about 10% of body fat. Two people of the same weight, can have very different amounts and types of fat. 29
  • 30. Why is central obesity worse than subcutaneous fat? It leaks more fat! and elevated free fatty acids predicts the progression to diabetes. TECHY STUFF: 1. Central fat has more adrenergic receptors and when stimulated by epinephrine, hormone sensitive lipase is activated which breaks down fat releasing it to the blood stream. (See: Arner P, Hellstrom L, Wahrenberg H, Bronnegard M. Beta-adrenoceptor expression in human fat cells from different regions. J Clin Invest 1990; 86:1595–1600. Nicklas BJ, Rogus EM, Colman EG, Goldberg AP. Visceral adiposity, increased adipocyte lipolysis, and metabolic dysfunction in obese postmenopausal women. Am J Physiol 1996; 270:E72–E78. ) 2. Central fat is also resistant to insulin’s ability to inhibit lipolysis. Note: 80% of diabetics are overweight with visceral obesity and thus have higher day-long elevations of FFA. (See: Reaven GM, Hollenback C, Jeng C-Y, Wu MS, Chen Y-DI, 1988. Measurement of plasma glucose, free fatty acid, lactate, and insulin for 24 hours in patients with NIDDM. Diabetes, 37, 1020-1024.) 3. Part of this is because of an increase in fat mass (Jensen MD, Haymond MW, Rizza RA, Cryer PE, Miles JM, 1989. Influence of body fat distribution on free fatty acid metabolism in obesity. J Clin Invest. 83,1168-1173) 30
  • 31. Note: Most fats in the blood (99.9%) are bound to albumin. Only a tiny amount are free (unbound). The levels of "free fatty acid" in the blood are limited by the number of albumin binding sites available. 31
  • 32. Where do the free fatty acids we find in plasma come from? As I said, much of Another source of the free fatty acids plasma free fatty in blood plasma originate from the acids are the triacylglyceride phospholipid membranes of cells, (TAG) stored in fat whose fat is released cells which are into blood by the regularly broken enzyme down by lipolysis. phospholipase A2. By the way, lipolysis from TAG favors unsaturated and short chained fatty acids. The most mobile is eicosapentenoic acid (C20:5n-3) and arachadonic acid (C20:4n-6). Diet is not an immediate source of FFA in blood, rather diet supplies the fat found in fat cells and the phospholipid membrane. Leaf, 2001 Circulation 104, 744-745. 32
  • 33. As there is very, very little FFA in blood • Only micrograms per liter – as FFA don’t like the aqueous blood environment. • By contrast there are grams of bound fat per liter –usually expressed as mg/dl of blood. • Measuring FFA is not a common practice. Leaf, 2001 Circulation 104, 744-745. 33
  • 34. There are four ways more FFA can get into circulation. 1. If there is more fat mass over which lipolysis can occur. 2. If subjects are stressed, norepinephrine triggers a sequence that activates hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) in fat cells to break down triglycerides (TG). 3. If there’s less insulin or resistance to insulin – as insulin has an antilipolytic effect on the same process. (Salaranta and Groop 1996: Diabetes Metabolism Review 12:15-36.) From Holm 2003, Biochemical Society . Transactions Volume 31, part 6. 4. If there is decreased uptake or oxidation of FFA (Colberg et al 1995, J Clin Investigation 95:1846-1853) Now, the trouble is: Obese people suffer all four of these conditions. 34
  • 35. Is there evidence that FFA causes IR? 35
  • 36. Yes! Insulin resistance can be induced in young healthy people without diabetes in a matter of hours, by simply exposing them to IV lipid solutions (e.g. a 10% safflower oil and 10% soy bean oil emulsion) while keeping glucose and insulin levels steady. What happens is that lipid replaces carbohydrate as fuel within a few hours. FFA builds up in muscle, glucose is not oxidized, and glycogen synthesis is dramatically reduced, (Boden et al, 1991 J. Clin. Invest. 88:960-966. Roden et al, 1996. J. Clin. Invest 97:2859-2865.) 36
  • 37. So how does increased FFA cause insulin resistance? Adapted from discussion in Williams 10th & 11th ed. Textbook of Endrocrinology and other referenced sources 37
  • 38. • Well, the first hypothesis – which is partially correct – is called the Randle Hypothesis(Randle et al, 1963. Lancet 1: 785-789). • It says that If tissue energy needs are being met by burning fat, muscle cells will not need glucose and will move to decrease its uptake. Thus, glucose will build up. • Here’s the best current theory… 38
  • 39. Free fatty acids are of different types and shapes Sometimes we Sometimes like this. symbolize them like this. And other ways too… 39
  • 40. We need something simpler for this presentation, let’s use just one shape and call it… Fat 40
  • 41. The “free” fat that “leaks” from belly fat is delivered to muscle cells in our blood. We’ll start simply with one fat molecule. With excess plasma FFA, the fat is stored in muscle (and liver) as triglycerides which are in a state of constant turn over in the cell back to FFA (Goodpaster et al 2000 Am J Fat Clin Nutrition 71:885-892. and Bays J Clin Endocrinology and Nucleus Met 2004 89(2) 463-478). Muscle cell Transfer of the free fatty acid (FFA) into the cell is facilitated by fatty acid binding protein –plasma membrane (FABP-pm). Other enzymes may also be involved, like fatty acid translocase and FA transport protein. 41
  • 42. Once in the cell, small chain fats diffuse into the mitochondria, but those over 10 carbons (which is most) must be taken up by two enzymes on the outer surface of the mitochondria that are throughout the cell M M M Fat M Nucleus Muscle cell The first mitochondrial enzyme is called Acyl-CoA synthetase (or fatty acyl-CoA synthetase) and it’s also found on endoplasmic reticulum. The product of FFA and acyl-CoA synthase is fatty acyl-Co-A. This is then taken up by a second enzyme on the outer mitochondrial surface that requires carnitine to work. It’s called Carnitine Palmitoyl Transferase (CPT-1). The result is acyl-carnitine, which a second CPT enzyme (CPT-2) in the inner mitochondrial membrane converts back to acyl-CoA, recovering the carnitine. The fatty acyl –coA is now inside the mitochondria and can proceed to Beta oxidation. The reaction is at Appendix 1. More information follows... 42
  • 43. Now, the mitochondria is amazing It’s the boiler-room of the cell 43
  • 44. Look, here’s one inside a cell After a Fat meal, here’s Sugar what happens: Fats and sugars move Beta into the cell. Oxida- tion Sugars are Citric digested to Acid acetyl coA in Cycle the cytoplasm. Then fat and acetyl –coA enter the mitochondria. Sugars are broken down through glycolysis in the cytoplasm to acetyl-Co-A. Short and medium chain FA diffuse across the mitochondrial membrane, but those longer than C10 must be transported by carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT-1) which resides on the outer mitochondrial membrane –see diagram at Appendix 1 . On the inner mitochondrial membrane fats are broken down by CPT II and a complex of enzymes which vary depending on chain length. 44
  • 45. In the Fats mitochondria, fats are digested in the beta Beta oxidation Oxida- tion cycle. Citric If you pay me a Acid dollar, I’ll show Cycle you the cycle. Pay here. The product of beta oxidation is acetyl CoA (a 2 carbon unit – attached to CoA), the same product of glycolysis in the cytosol. Acetyl CoA from both sources then enters the citric acid cycle Pay here to see. The citric acid cycle is also known as the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) or Krebs cycle 45
  • 46. Fats Sugars Beta Oxida- tion Citric Acid Cycle Thus, both fats and sugars are fuel for the citric acid cycle which eventually makes energy (ATP molecules) for the body - some of which were used to transport long-chain fatty acids into the mitochondria. (Acyl-CoA synthetase requires ATP to make acyl CoA.) 46
  • 47. But what happens if you have too much fat and sugar enter the citric acid cycle? Fat citrate Sugar The citric acid cycle starts Product 8 Product 1 working fast. Product Product But some steps happen 7 2 faster than others, so some Citric Acid Cycle products build up at the slower steps. Product Product 6 3 One build-up product of particular note is “product 1” Product Product 5 4 which is called “citrate.” Appendix 3: The CAC chemical names 47
  • 48. Once made, citrate Fat can flow back into the cytoplasm. and through a series of steps, shut off the mitochondrial membrane citrate enzyme, CPT-1 Citric (Remember that?) Acid Cycle So that long- chained fats can no longer get into the mitochodria! Now that would make sense. It would slow down the fuel supply so things can work at normal pace. Citrate activates the enzyme acetyl CoA carboxylase, which catalyzes the conversion of acetyl CoA to malonyly-CoA. Malonyl CoA is a potent inhibitor of CPT-1. See the reaction at Appendix 4. Bavenholm PN, Pigon J, Saha AK, et al. Fatty acid oxidation and the regulation of malonyl-CoA in human muscle. Diabetes 2000; 49:1078–1083. Ruderman NB, Saha AK, Vavvas D, Witters LA. Malonyl- CoA, fuel sensing, and insulin resistance. Am J Physiol 1999; 276:E1–E18. 48
  • 49. Fat Fat Fat Fat The trouble is that now fat Glycerol starts to build Glycerol up in the muscle cytoplasm. speeding up the process of forming intracellular TAG. Citric Acid Cycle The accumulation of TAG in the muscle may not by itself be harmful (Boden and Laakso 2004. Diabetes Care 27(9) 2253-987) . Rather, it is probably one of the intermediary products on the way to forming TAG that causes problems, it is called diacyl glycerol (DAG). And it is often inserted into the cell membrane. 49
  • 50. It may help to recall that the cell membrane actually looks more like this Fat Fat Glycerol So it’s easy for diacyl glycerol (DAG) to slide in. 50
  • 51. But excess DAG is not good! DAG activates one of the forms of the enzyme Protein Kinase C – Calcium and DAG dependent activation are shown below The enzyme isoform is membrane-bound Protein Kinase C theta (PKC ), one of at least 12 forms of PKC. A protein kinase is an enzyme that transfers a phosphate group from a donor molecule (usually ATP) to an amino acid residue of a protein. Most protein kinases can only phosphorylate one kind of amino acid. PKC phosphorylates two: serine and threonine. Phosphorylation can activate or inhibit an enzyme. PKC activation occurs with binding of diacylglycerol (DAG), often in the presence of calcium (released from the sacroplasmic reticulum by inositol triphosphate –a sugar molecule) - though PKC theta does not require it - resulting in translocation of the PKC-DAG complex to the cell membrane where it is active and activates other signaling molecules. The whole reaction can be seen at Appendix 5. The exact mechanism whereby fat activates PKC is not known; it may not be through citrate. The effect of activating PKC is a reduction in insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) and phosphatidylionositol-3, required in translocating glucose transporter to the cell surface. The result is hyperglycemia. Good review at Boden G and Shulman GI, 2002. Free fatty acids in obesity and type 2 diabetes: defining their role in the development of insulin resistance and β-cell dysfunction. European Journal of Clinical Investigation (2002) 32 (Suppl. 3), 14–23. 51
  • 52. Once activated, PKC phosphorylates the MAPK protein and can also (next slide) phosphorylate the insulin receptor 52
  • 53. Here’s what’s going on at the insulin receptor • Normally, insulin binds to the extracellular alpha-subunits • This activates the beta-subunits, which become autophosphorylated at tyrosine residues. (Thus the beta unit is a tyrosine kinase.) • Seven intracellular tyrosines become autophosphorylated in response to insulin binding. • This causes a 200-fold increase in catalytic activity. • However, if the Insulin Receptor is phosphorylated by Protein Kinase C –induced by excess fats - phosphorylation occurs at a serine or threonine amino acid and insulin action is inhibited. • The result is less IRS-1 and phosphatidylionositol-3, and thus ultimately fewer GLUT 4s are transported to the surface.. 53
  • 54. Here’s a little more detail of what happens below the insulin receptor. Insulin binding to receptor can either stimulate the PI(3)K or the MAP kinase pathway. But if excess blood fat (DAG) stimulates PKC then both the insulin receptor is inhibited and the MAP kinase pathway is favored over the PI(3)K pathway and its products, like glucose transporters. 54
  • 56. So glucose builds up Here’s the fats (NEFA) coming into in the blood. or building up in the cell. PKC alters They are first A simplified version of the the insulin turned into fatty receptor, acyl-Co-A, then inactivating it. DAG. whole process It also inhibits is shown here IRS-1 and as a From: Hulver MW and Dohm consequence, GL, 2004. The molecular GLUT 4, “the mechanism linking muscle fat accumulation to cell door” for insulin resistance. Proceedings glucose, is not Both DAG and of the Nutrition Society (2004), Though it’s not made and fatty acyl co-A shown, FFA 63, 375–380. transported. To can activate also increase oxidative stress Note that increased NEFA leads the cell surface. Protein Kinase C. and the to increased fatty acyl-CoA and resulting also leads to increased reactive ceramide (a fat derived from cell oxygen species membrane – see Appendix 6 can activate PKC (see here for more information.) Boden and which has a negative effect on Laakso, 2004) Akt and thus a negatiove affect The unsimplified process is a bit overwhelming..see on GLUT 4 translocation. Here’ I’ll show you… Fig. 3. Some of the cellular mechanisms that link intramyocellular lipid accumulation with insulin resistance. DAG, diacylglycerols; TAG, triacylglycerols; IRS-1, insulin receptor substrate 1; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; PDK, phosphatidylinositol-dependent kinase; akt/PKB, protein kinase B; PKC, protein kinase C; aPKC, atypical protein kinase C; PPase, protein phosphatase; CPT-1, carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1; (+), activation; (–), inhibition. 56
  • 57. 57
  • 58. And that’s the amazing and perhaps true story of how having too much visceral fat may cause Insulin Resistance and diabetes!!!! in muscle. There is, of course, debate over the visceral obesity causes IR hypothesis. Miles and Jensen (2005) for example thinks subcutaneous fat is the main contributor to FFA and IR - see Diabetes Care 28(9) 2326-2328. 58
  • 59. But it’s probably not intramuscular FFA that is the problem - per se. For example: Endurance trained athletes have high intramuscular TAG, but don’t have IR. (Goodpaster et al 2001 J Clin Endocrin Metab 86:5755-5761.) SO, IR SEEMS TO OCCUR WHEN THE INTRAMUSCULAR FAT ISN’T OXIDIZED FAST ENOUGH. 59
  • 60. And that leads to another hypothesis…Maybe the cause of IR is some defect in mitochondrial functioning? (see Schrauwen’s 2007 review in J Clin Endocrin and Metab 92(4): 1229-1231. www.odranoel.eu/Images/Mitochondria%20red%20i.. . 60
  • 61. It could be too few mitochondria • As you’ve seen, the number of mitochondria would be important in energy balance. The more mitochondria the more fats and sugars you could burn so they wouldn’t build up to activate PKC. • People with Insulin Resistance have fewer mitochondria, Type 1 fibers are light, Type 2 are dark in and have more Type 2 muscle fibers than Type 1 muscle this stained slide. fibers in relation to normal subjects (Diabetes 2005 54:8-14.) TYPE 1 TYPE 2 • CHARACTERISTIC Muscle Muscle Type 2 muscle fibers have fewer mitochondria and favor Contraction Slow Fast glycolysis as opposed to TCA cycle oxidation. • A number of proteins regulate the number of Color Red White mitochodria. Oxidation High Low • Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) Glycolysis Low High gamma– coactivator 1a and 1b - say that three times fast! Mitochondria Abundant Sparse - is one that is currently being researched. The name is ATPase, pH often shortened to PGC-1a and PGC-1b in the literature. Light Dark PPAR gamma, by the way, is a receptor on the cell nucleus of a variety of tissues 9.4 (heart, muscle, colon, kidney, pancreas, and spleen , fat cells, and macrophages) ATPase, pH 4.3 Dark Light • Trouble is, we don’t know if the number of mitochondria NADH-TR Dark Light (and their promoters) is a cause or effect of IR. (Note: SDH Dark Light insulin stimulation up-regulates mitochondria.) In COX Dark Light addition, muscle types may be inherited or acquired - Glycogen Scant Abundant exercise changes muscle type patterns. 61
  • 62. It could be dysfunctional mitochondria Subjects with IR They also have or diabetes have reduced amounts of a reduced a inner mitochondrial number of genes membrane protein responsive to (uncoupling protein- PGC-1a that 3, UCP-3) that code for oxidative moves fatty acids metabolism. from the (Mootha et al 2003 Nat mitochondria to the Genet 34:267-273. Patti cytosol to protect the et al, 2003, Proc Nat’l Acad Sci USA 100:8466- mitochondria from 8471.). accumulation of NEFA. (Schrauwen et al The FASEB Journal. 2001;15:2497- 2502.) and Schrauwen and Hesselink, 2004. Diabetes 53:1412-1417.) • But are these causes of IR or the effects of FFA/IR? (Roden 2005 Int J Obes (London) 29 (Suppl 2) S111-S115.) 62
  • 63. Mitochondrial maladies may be behind the often reported tiredness diabetics suffer. YOU’D BE TIRED TOO IF YOUR MITOCHONDRIA WEREN’T WORKING RIGHT! 63
  • 64. The most simple etiological explanations for IR is simply too much sugar (hyperglycemia) or too much insulin. • Decrease sugar intake and you decrease IR and diabetes. This has been proven among Pima Indians. • High levels of glucose (200 mg/dL and above) causes defective action of insulin in skeletal muscle (which fails to take up glucose) and liver (which overproduces glucose). Thus excess glucose causes even greater glucose. (Sheenan, 2008. New Mechanism of Glucose Control) • If you take normal subjects and subject them to high insulin levels for 24-72 hours, insulin receptors will be downregulated and the post receptor bonding pathways will not work well. Insulin will lose the ability to increase nonoxidative (i.e. glycolytic) glucose disposal and will also lose the ability to make glycogen –thus providing a means to diabetes. See Williams (2008). Some other hypotheses are in the Appendix 7 – Press here 64
  • 65. Note: The American Diabetes Association recently said “…there is little evidence that total carbohydrate intake is associated with the development of type 2 diabetes.”
  • 66. But the studies they cite don’t conclude this. • Two are by Salmeron and colleagues in 1997. • One in Diabetes Care concludes for men: • “These findings support the hypothesis that diets with a high glycemic load and low cereal fiber content increase risk of NIDDM in men. Further, they suggest that grains should be consumed in a minimally processed form to reduce the incidence of NIDDM.” • The other in JAMA makes the same conclusion for women. • One was conducted in Sweden and found no association between dietary intake and developing diabetes – but the Swedish diet is different than ours. • The last one was by Coditz et al, 1992. This one found “…no association between intakes of energy, protein, sucrose, carbohydrate, or fiber and risk of diabetes.” But, they controlled for BMI. What if the effects are through BMI?
  • 67. OK, you’ve looked at how excess fatty acids affect muscle. WHAT ABOUT OTHER TISSUES? 67
  • 68. Insulin resistance also develops in fat cells In much the same way as muscle cells. 68
  • 69. Recall that Insulin lets things in – not out As with muscle cells, insulin opens the cell doors after a meal to Sugar let sugar in The sugar that is let in is turned into fat. Fat & more In addition, insulin also lets fat in, which is also stored as fat. Fat and it won’t let fat out (it inhibits lipolysis). 69
  • 70. But, if insulin resistance develops Sugars can Sugars no longer get into fat cells Sugars (no GLUT Sugars transporter), nor can fats (as carnitine Fats palmitoyltran sferase, CPT- Fats 1, is down- regulated) so both build up Fats in the blood stream. The fats are in the form of free fatty acids In addition, in insulin resistance, fat cells have increased lipolysis, resulting leaking higher levels of free fatty acids. 70
  • 71. Now note the hyperglycemic effects downstream • You just saw how insulin resistance in fat cells cause an increase in FFA. This causes: • Increased FFA oxidation in muscle, leading to more insulin resistance and hyperglycemia –as it did with muscle. Reviewed in Sheenan, 2008 It’s a spiral of worsening effects! 71
  • 72. There are other peculiar fat cell effects in diabetes. • In type 2 diabetes, preadipocytes, mainly in visceral fat, do not mature properly to adipocytes. • These preadipocytes are not very insulin-sensitive and do not secrete an anti- inflammatory cytokine called adiponectin –which is only secreted by fat cells and levels of which are inversely correlated with body fat percentage in adults. • Rather, they are hypertrophic (swollen) and secrete proinflammatory cytokines, especially tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-6 (IL-6). • Because these immature fat cells, won’t grow up: diabetics suffer global inflammation. Insulin has a variety of adipose effects: It causes pre-adipocytes to mature into adipocytes. In addition, it stimulates glucose transport and triglyceride synthesis (lipogenesis). It also inhibits lipolysis and increases fatty acid uptake by stimulating LPL activity in fat. Kahn BB and Flier JS, 2000. Obesity and insulin resistance. The Journal of Clinical Investigation 106(4). 473-481. See Appendix 8 for notes on how insulin inhibits lipolysis. 72
  • 73. OK, now we’ll look at FFA and the liver 73
  • 74. One of liver’s main jobs is to keep blood glucose levels steady. Liver Usually this is a simple process When blood sugar is low, the liver makes and releases glucose. Liver can release glucose either by releasing stored glucose (i.e. glycogen) or making glucose in a process called gluconeogenesis. To break down glycogen, low blood sugar triggers alpha cells in the pancreas to release a hormone called glucagon. Glucagon binds to receptors on the liver causing cAMP to be released. (To see the reaction, press here > Appendix 9) After several steps, this activates glycogen phosphorylase to initiate the breakdown of stored glycogen. To make glucose (to see the reaction press here: Appendix 2) three substrates (pyruvate, oxaloacetate or glycerol ) Pancreas and three enzymes: PEPCK, G-6_Pase, and fructose-1,6- bisphosphatase are needed Genetic expression of the first two enzymes can be induced by glucagon – if fasting (ie. low blood sugar), glucocorticoids (cortisone and cortisol) -if under stress, or catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine, and dopamine) - by exercise. Growth hormone secreted by the pituitary and cortisol also inhibit the uptake of glucose by muscle and fat. Epinephrine activates glycogen breakdown in the same way as glucagon –as shown in the Appendix 1. Barthel A and Schmoll D, 2003. Novel concepts in insulin regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 285: E685–E692 74
  • 75. One of liver’s main jobs is to keep blood glucose levels steady. Liver When blood sugar is high after a meal, it responds to both the sugar and the insulin by stopping gluconeogenesis. (Ferrannini et al 1988 Metabolism 37:79-85. It also absorbs about a third of the carbohydrate from the meal. Ferrannini op cit. Liver is freely permeable to blood sugar (unlike muscle). High blood sugar normally triggers beta cells in the pancreas to release insulin. Pancreas Insulin binds to receptors on the liver (and muscle – as we saw) causing glucose uptake in liver (and muscle). As glucose is taken into liver cells it binds to and inhibits glycogen phosphorylase - which normally breaks down stored starch) The result is that glycogen is not broken down and sugar (glucose) is not released into blood. Instead, glucose is stored as glycogen in the liver. As glucose is not added to blood, glucose levels return to normal. Hepatic glucose activates glucose kinase to convert glucose to G-6-P. G-6-P is converted to G-1-P by phosphoglucomutase and is then converted to glycogen. 75
  • 76. Here’s a nice diagram of the process To “see” the With low blood normal process, sugar follow the start with high blue arrows. blood sugar (at top) and follow Low blood sugar the yellow causes pancreatic arrows. release of glucagon High blood which causes the sugar causes liver to breakdown pancreatic glycogen and raise secretion of blood sugar to insulin which normal levels. causes liver to store glucose Glucagon works the (make glycogen) exact opposite of and help restore insulin – it releases blood sugar glucose. levels. health.howstuffworks.com/diabetes1.htm Trouble is: In Insulin Resistance, glucagon is continually released, causing glucose to be released, and this adds to the already accumulating hyperglycemia due to insulin resistance. It’s bad on top of bad. 76
  • 77. Note also what happens when there’s excess FFA around? 1. Heapatic FFA uptake is increased by mass action, leading to increased FFA oxidation, leading to increased acetyl CoA which stimulates the two rate limiting enzymes* in gluconeogenesis while providing ATP for forming more glucose. * Pyruvate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate Exton et al, 1966 J Biol Chem 244 4095-4102; Bahl et al, 1997 Biochem pharmacol 53, 67-74. 2. FFAs also increase the activity of the enzyme that controls the release of glucose from the liver. Glucose-6-phosphatase Massillon et al 1996. Diabetes 46 153-157. 3. FFAs also interfere with the insulin receptor on liver, resulting in the inability of insulin to stop gluconeogenesis. Lam et al 2003 Am J Physiol 284 E863-E873. Together, these effects can increase plasma glucose at a time when the liver should be removing glucose. More terrible news!! 77
  • 78. Here’s a final terrible blow • In insulin resistance the liver over secretes VLDL –which is of course triglyceride rich. • Triglycerides are an independent risk factor for heart disease. • Further, the increased lipid production within liver leads to a pathologic condition known as “fatty liver.” In severe fatty liver, fat comprises as much as 40% of the liver’s weight (as opposed to 5% in a normal liver), and the weight of the liver may increase from 3.31 lb (1.5 kg) to as much as 11 lb (4.9 kg). Minimal fatty changes are temporary and asymptomatic; severe or persistent changes may cause liver dysfunction. Fatty liver is usually reversible by simply eliminating the cause –usually alcohol, obesity, malnutrition, diabetes, Cushing’s syndrome, hepatotoxins … Normal, fatty and cirrhotic liver. 78
  • 79. We return now to where we started – with pancreatic beta cells – which make insulin. What is the effect of FFA on the pancreas? 79
  • 80. • We already know that elevated Plasma FFAs predict the development of glucose intolerance and diabetes (Charles et al, 1997. Diabetologia 40:1101-1106.) http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/images/cholesterol.jpg 80
  • 81. But what do we know about FFAs and the pancreas? 1. We know that short-term (acute) elevations of FFAs (oleic, linoleic, lauric, or palmitic) when directly injected into the pancreas immediately stimulate insulin secretion (Crespin et al, 1973, J Clin Invest 52:1979-1984). 2. nsulin immediately 81
  • 82. But what do we know about FFAs and the pancreas? 1. We know that after about 24 hours of fasting FFAs are the primary fuel 2. If then given a glucose challenge (at time 0) – as when we eat – the FFA augments the acute primary response release of preformed insulin… 3. But once insulin is released, it’s antilipolytic and clearing effect removes FFA 4. …and curtails any further co-stimulation of the beta cell. So, you don’t see the typical secondary response to glucose (McGarry and Dobbins, 1999) 5. During fasting FFA are required to maintain at least a basal level of insulin. 6. These seem to be adaptive functions of FFA to fasting (McGarry and Dobbin, 1999). 82
  • 83. We also know that the more saturated and longer the FFA, the greater the insulin response – while fasting to a glucose challenge (McGarry & Dobbins 1999). 83
  • 84. Our trouble is that we are not in an environment where fasting is a regular occurrence. We are in a food rich – especially saturated fat rich – environment. Thus, the adaptive effects of low levels of FFA during fasting which act to enhance insulin secretion and glucose absorption when the fast is broken now works against us. Long-term exposure of the pancreas to high FFA – as you see with overweight – leads to enhanced insulin secretion at low glucose levels (giving higher basal insulin levels), but suppression of making new insulin, and impaired ability of beta cells to respond to high glucose concentrations (McGarry and Dobbin, 1999; Carpentier et al, 1999, Kashyap et al, 2003…). Thus, increased FFA > decreased insulin secretion. BUMMER! 84
  • 85. 1. We’ve also known since the late 1960s that if long chain FFA (oleic acid) is infused with infused glucose, the insulin levels are dramatically raised above glucose alone – and the rise in insulin is accompanied by falling glucose in healthy fasting dogs. Greenough et al 1967 Lancet ii 1334-1336. 2. The increase in glucose-stimulated insulin release to short-term exposure to long chain FFA has now been demonstrated many times (e.g. Paolisso et al, 1996. Diabetologia 38:1295-1299). 3. However, if the exposure to increased FFA (e.g. a twofold elevation) is longer than a day (in the studies sited, 48 hours) in rats (Sako and Grill, 1990 Endocrinology 127: 1580–1589) or healthy non-obese young men (e.g. Carpentier et al 1999. Am J Physiology 276: E1055-E1066) – the FFA induced augmented insulin response to glucose is lost. 85
  • 86. If you are obese, but not diabetic, the ability of long-term administration of FFA to stimulate insulin release when challenged with glucose is markedly decreased. (Carpentier et al 2000 Diabetes 49 399- 408.) • If, you are not diabetic and not obese (BMI 25, avg age 43) BUT, you have a first degree diabetic relative who is diabetic, the higher your plasma level of FFA, the less insulin you secrete in the first 10 minutes – the acute response (Paolisso et al, 1998). • The good news is that in this study if you treat with a drug (acipimox –a niacin derivative) that reduces FFA, the acute insulin response increases. There is also evidence that FFA that are richer in saturated than polyunsaturated fats have a greater decrease in insulin release Stefan et al 2001 Hormone and Metabolism Research 33 :432-438. 86
  • 87. OK here’s a good summary Prolonged experimental elevation of plasma NEFA in humans reproduces the cardinal pathophysiological features of type 2 diabetes, including reduced insulinmediated glucose utilization, impaired glucose- mediated insulin secretion, and increased endogenous glucose production (10, 36, 39). 87
  • 88. SO, GIVEN ALL YOU’VE LEARNED, WHAT MUST WE DO TO IMPROVE THE PUBLIC’S HEALTH? 88
  • 89. Here’s my thoughts 1. We need more money for basic research; it’s hard to prevent and treat a disease that’s not understood. 2. More people need to know if they are insulin resistant – why wait until they are diabetic. 3. Assuming the FFA hypothesis is correct, we need to find ways to lower FFAs. 4. It would seem if we want to burn fat, we must limit or control insulin release – as insulin restricts lipolysis. 89
  • 90. Stem Questions 1. T/F IR is commonly measured during routine physicals. 2. The prevalence of IR is… 3. The organ that detects sugar and makes insulin… 4. In Phase 2 IR is characterized by the following blood states… 5. In Phase 3 IR is characterized by the following blood states… 6. Insulin resistance is a disease of … 7. The pancreas will release insulin in response to which of the following 8. Ultimately IR is probably caused by … 9. The figure at left describes… 10. T/F IR is NOT always associated with obesity. 90
  • 91. Stem 2 11. Central obesity is worse than subcutaneous fat because… 12. Epinephrine, stimulates the following enzyme on central fat cells… 13. Which of the following explains how FFA in the blood can be increased: • If there is more fat mass over which lipolysis can occur. • If subjects are stressed, norepinephrine triggers a sequence that activates hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) in fat cells • If there’s less insulin or resistance to insulin – as insulin has an antilipolytic effect on the same process. • If there is decreased uptake or oxidation of FFA. 14. Excess FFA entering the mitochondria eventually causes insulin resistance by producing DAG. How? 15. DAG exerts its effects by activating an enzyme named… 16. PKC phosphorylating the insulin receptor results in … 17. Is Intramuscular FFA by itself a bad thing? 91
  • 92. Stem 3 18. PPAR gamma is… 19. As opposed to a disease of FFA, IR may be a malfunction of the following organelle… 20. A inner mitochondrial membrane protein of concern in mitochondrial dysfunction in IR is … 21. T/F According to the ADA “…there is little evidence that total carbohydrate intake is associated with the development of type 2 diabetes.” 22. Besides muscle cells IR develops in … 23. Adiponectin is best described as… 24. Proinflammatory cytokines secreted by fat cells include… 92
  • 93. Stem 4 • The organ that makes, stores, and releases glucose into the blood when blood sugar is low is… • low blood sugar triggers alpha cells in the pancreas to release a hormone called ________. • Glucagon is made … ________. • Glucagon acts to break down ___ in the liver. • Glucagon stimulates making __- in the liver. • Normally, as glucose is taken into liver cells it binds to and inhibits an enzyme named ____________ - which normally breaks down …stored starch – thus high glucose inhibits the beakdown of glucose. • Excess FFA generally has the effect on liver of…. • The effect of excess FFA on pancreatic beta cells is 93
  • 94. The End 94