2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.domaniend.2017.04.003
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Insulin signaling in various equine tissues under basal conditions and acute stimulation by intravenously injected insulin

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Cited by 9 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Marycz et al [11] reported increased insulin receptor and IRS expression in subcutaneous adipose tissue of Polish warmbloods with EMS, our conflicting data may therefore be due to the different depots we chose to study. There are clear depot-specific differences in insulin signalling and gene expression in humans and horses [36][37][38]. It should be noted that this candidate gene approach for assessing insulin signalling is very limited given the vast number of genes and the dynamic nature of insulin signalling and it tells us little about function which is generally governed by phosphorylation events.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Marycz et al [11] reported increased insulin receptor and IRS expression in subcutaneous adipose tissue of Polish warmbloods with EMS, our conflicting data may therefore be due to the different depots we chose to study. There are clear depot-specific differences in insulin signalling and gene expression in humans and horses [36][37][38]. It should be noted that this candidate gene approach for assessing insulin signalling is very limited given the vast number of genes and the dynamic nature of insulin signalling and it tells us little about function which is generally governed by phosphorylation events.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In humans, adiponectin expression is higher in SAT than VAT (Fain et al, 2004) but the opposite is found in horses (Bruynsteen et al, 2013). There is also some evidence in humans and horses (Warnken et al, 2017) that SAT is more insulin sensitive than VAT, potentially contributing to 'safer' storage of lipids. This distinction between SAT and VAT is relevant in horses because clinical measures of AT depots (body condition scoring, weigh tapes) almost exclusively measure SAT.…”
Section: Subcutaneous Versus Visceral Adipose Tissuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since no group differences were found for amino acids when disregarding the insulin concentration, it is possible that this supposed insulin resistance was offset by hyperinsulinemia. To investigate this possibility further, the simultaneous assessment of ID and tissue-specific insulin sensitivity by immunoblotting [29], proteomics or hardly realisable (in horses) positron emission tomography in combination with a 18F fluorodeoxyglucose OGT [30] would be required.…”
Section: Impact Of Insulin On the Metabolomementioning
confidence: 99%