Dietary fatty acid composition modifies hepatic lipid metabolism. To determine the effects of fatty acids on hepatic triglyceride storage, rats were fed diets enriched in carbohydrates (control), fish oil, or lard. After 4 weeks, the animals were fasted overnight. In the morning, the animals were either sacrificed or fed 8 g of their respective diets before sacrifice. Animals ingested more food calories with diets containing fish oil than with other diets. However, fish oil-fed animals weighed less and had less body fat. In fish oil-fed animals, liver triglyceride was lower by 27% (P < .05) and 73% (P < .01) than in control-and lard-fed animals, respectively. Fish oil altered the postprandial gene expression of hepatic regulators of fatty acid degradation and synthesis. Fish oil feeding blunted the normal postprandial decline in fatty acid degradation genes (PPAR␣, CPT1, and ACO) and blunted the normal postprandial rise in triglyceride synthesis genes (SREBP1-c, FAS, SCD-1). Therefore, the direct postprandial effect of fish oil ingestion decreases the propensity for hepatic triglyceride storage. In conclusion, n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids decrease total body weight, total body fat, and hepatic steatosis. (HEPATOLOGY 2004;39:608 -616.)
These data show that a LCHF diet stimulates PYY secretion more than a LFHC diet in obese individuals.
Rodent leptin is secreted by adipocytes and acutely regulates appetite and chronically regulates body weight. Mechanisms for leptin secretion in cultured adipocytes were investigated. Acutely, energy-producing substrates stimulated leptin secretion about twofold. Biologically inert carbohydrates failed to stimulate leptin secretion, and depletion of intracellular energy inhibited leptin release. There appears to be a correlation between intracellular ATP concentration and the rate of leptin secretion. Insulin increased leptin secretion by an additional 25%. Acute leptin secretion is calcium dependent. When incubated in the absence of calcium or in the presence of intracellular calcium chelators, glucose plus insulin failed to stimulate leptin secretion. In contrast, basal leptin secretion is secreted spontaneously and is calcium independent. Adipocytes from fatter animals secrete more leptin, even in the absence of calcium, compared with cells from thinner animals. Acute stimulus-secretion coupling mechanisms were then investigated. The potassium channel activator diazoxide and the nonspecific calcium channel blockers nickel and cadmium inhibited acute leptin secretion. These studies demonstrate that intracellular energy production is important for acute leptin secretion and that potassium and calcium flux may play roles in coupling intracellular energy production to leptin secretion.
Osteoporosis is a known complication of diabetes mellitus, suggesting a role for insulin in bone homeostasis. We studied insulin receptors and insulin action in the osteoblast-like rat osteogenic sarcoma cell line ROS 17/2.8. These cells share many common features with the osteoblast, such as 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 receptors, PTH receptors, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3-induced modulation of alkaline phosphatase activity and osteocalcin. Competition binding studies revealed high affinity insulin receptors, with an ED50 for insulin of 1 nM. The receptors were highly specific for insulin, with 60% inhibition of insulin binding by an antireceptor antibody, no competition by epidermal growth factor, and an ED50 of 300 nM for proinsulin. Steady state maximal insulin binding was obtained by 40 min at 37 C, and insulin degradation, as measured by trichloroacetic acid solubility, was 1%/h at 37 C. ROS cells readily internalized insulin, and under steady state binding conditions at 37 C, 56% of the cell-associated radioactivity consisted of intracellular material. Chloroquine (100 microM) inhibited intracellular processing of insulin, leading to a 300% increase in cell-associated insulin by 2 h (37 C). Photoaffinity labeling of the insulin receptor with the photosensitive analog of insulin, B2 (2-nitro-4-azidophenyl-acetyl)des-pheB1-insulin, followed by solubilization and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, revealed specific bands of 125K and 430K mol wt under reducing and nonreducing conditions, respectively. Thus, the structure of insulin receptors in ROS cells appears comparable to that of insulin receptors of known target tissues. Insulin action was also examined. Insulin did not stimulate [2-3H]deoxyglucose uptake or [1-14C]leucine incorporation into protein. In contrast, physiological concentrations of insulin inhibited alkaline phosphatase activity in nonconfluent cells. After exposure to insulin for 24 h, alkaline phosphatase activity was decreased compared to basal by 39.5% and 50% with 5 and 50 ng/ml insulin, respectively. In conclusion, ROS cells bind insulin to specific receptors that are similar to insulin receptors on other target tissues; receptors internalize insulin, which is then processed through a chloroquine-sensitive pathway; insulin does not affect membrane substrate transport; and insulin does inhibit the activity of an enzyme that is important in bone metabolism. ROS cells represent a model for studying insulin effects on bone.
. Lipid metabolism and resistin gene expression in insulin-resistant Fischer 344 rats. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 282: E626-E633, 2002; 10.1152/ajpendo. 00346.2001The interrelationship between insulin and leptin resistance in young Fischer 344 (F344) rats was studied. Young F344 and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were fed regular chow. F344 animals had two-to threefold higher insulin and triglyceride concentrations and increased stores of triglycerides within liver and muscle. F344 animals gained more body fat. Both acyl-CoA oxidase (ACO) and carnitine palmitoyltransferase I gene expression were 20-50% less in F344 animals than in age-matched SD animals. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-␣ gene expression was reduced in 70-day-old F344 animals. Finally, resistin gene expression was similar in 70-day-old SD and F344 animals. Resistin gene expression increased fivefold in F344 animals and twofold in SD animals from 70 to 130 days, without a change in insulin sensitivity. We conclude that young F344 animals have both insulin and leptin resistance, which may lead to diminished fatty oxidation and accumulation of triglycerides in insulin-sensitive target tissues. We did not detect a role for resistin in the etiology of insulin resistance in F344 animals.Fischer 344 rats; acyl-coenzyme A oxidase; carnitine palmitoyltransferase I; peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-␣
ObjectiveTo compare the effects of weight loss by an energy-restricted low-fat diet versus low-carbohydrate diet on serum peptide YY (PYY) levels.Design8-week prospective study of 30 obese adults (mean age: 42.8 ± 2.0 years, mean BMI 35.5 ± 0.6 kg/m2).ResultsAfter 8 weeks, subjects on the low-carbohydrate diet lost substantially more weight than those on the low-fat diet (5.8 kg vs. 0.99 kg, p<0.001). Weight loss by either diet resulted in a 9% reduction in both mean fasting serum PYY levels (baseline: 103.5 ± 8.8 pg/ml, after weight loss: 94.1 ± 6.5 pg/ml, p<0.01) and postprandial AUC PYY (baseline: (20.5 ± 1.5) × 103 pg·hr−1ml−1, after weight loss: mean AUC PYY (18.8 ± 1.4) × 103 pg·hr−1ml−1 p<0.001). There was a trend towards lower levels of PYY with greater degrees of weight loss.ConclusionsReduced PYY levels after weight loss by an energy-restricted low-fat or low-carbohydrate diet likely represents a compensatory response to maintain energy homeostasis and contributes to difficulty in weight loss during energy-restricted diets.
The processing and trafficking of insulin in cultured rat hepatocytes were studied. A time course of binding of radiolabeled insulin to hepatocytes at 37 C revealed a rapid rise in cell-associated radioactivity that reached a steady state by 20 min. Using an acid medium to extract insulin bound to surface receptors, the time courses of receptor binding and internalization of the ligand were characterized. The earliest event in insulin processing was the binding of insulin to surface receptors, reaching steady state by 20 min with a t1/2 of 4 min. The internalization rate of ligand was initially slower than the binding rate, with a t1/2 of 6 min. Similar internalization rates of the insulin receptor were found by measuring the trypsin sensitivity of hepatocyte insulin receptors covalently occupied with a photo-affinity-labeled derivative of insulin [( 125I]B2 (2-nitro-4-azido-phenylacetyl)Des-PheB1-insulin). At steady state, the internalized ligand and receptor comprised approximately 40-45% of the cell-associated radioactivity. The time course of intracellular degradation was assessed by trichloroacetic acid (TCA) precipitability and Sephadex G-50 gel chromatography of solubilized cells containing only internalized radioactivity. Intracellular TCA-soluble and low mol wt degradation products first appeared by 5 min and were released from the cell 3 min later. Chloroquine (100 microM) completely inhibited the formation of intracellular low mol wt degradation products as well as their appearance in the medium. The release of intracellular radioactivity was assessed by first removing surface-bound insulin with acid extraction. Eighty percent of the intracellular radioactivity was released in 45 min with a t1/2 of 8 min. The released radioactivity was assessed by TCA precipitability and gel chromatography. These results demonstrate that after 20 min, 43% of the released intracellular radioactivity is intact insulin. The percentage of intact insulin released increases in a dose-dependent fashion as the amount of insulin bound and internalized increases. In conclusion, the earliest event in insulin processing is binding to surface receptors. After a short delay, insulin and its receptor are internalized and trafficked into either a chloroquine-sensitive degradative pathway or a chloroquine-insensitive retroendocytotic pathway. The amount of insulin that traverses the nondegradative retroendocytotic pathway is proportional to the amount of insulin bound and internalized by the cell.
Leptin is a hormone that is secreted by fat cells and has roles in body weight regulation, glucose metabolism, reproduction, and other neuroendocrine functions. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the secretagogues, insulin, glucose, and pyruvate, enhance leptin secretion by increasing leptin synthesis, or whether these secretagogues stimulate the quantal release of a stored cytosolic pool of leptin. We found that in the absence of secretagogues, the rate of leptin secretion from isolated rat adipocytes approximately equals the rate of leptin synthesis. For 60 min after the addition of secretagogues, leptin synthesis rapidly increases, with little or no leptin secretion; leptin increases intracellularly by approximately 60% (P < 0.05). After 60 min, leptin is significantly released from cells. At 120 and 240 min, secretagogues enhance leptin secretion into the medium by 35% (P < 0.05) and 40% (P < 0.01), respectively. Cycloheximide prevents the synthesis and the secretagogue-mediated secretion of leptin. Monensin, an inhibitor of protein translocation, has no effect on leptin synthesis, but it blocks the secretagogue-mediated secretion of leptin. These findings suggest that secretagogues enhance leptin release by increasing leptin synthesis, rather than by enhancing the release of a preexisting cytosolic pool of leptin.
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