McLaughlin T, Sherman A, Tsao P, Gonzalez O, Yee G, Lamendola C, Reaven G M, Cushman S W
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, 300 Pasteur Drive, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Diabetologia. 2007 Aug;50(8):1707-15. doi: 10.1007/s00125-007-0708-y. Epub 2007 Jun 5.
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: The biological mechanism by which obesity predisposes to insulin resistance is unclear. One hypothesis is that larger adipose cells disturb metabolism via increased lipolysis. While studies have demonstrated that cell size increases in proportion to BMI, it has not been clearly shown that adipose cell size, independent of BMI, is associated with insulin resistance. The aim of this study was to test this widely held assumption by comparing adipose cell size distribution in 28 equally obese, otherwise healthy individuals who represented extreme ends of the spectrum of insulin sensitivity, as defined by the modified insulin suppression test.
Subcutaneous periumbilical adipose tissue biopsy samples were fixed in osmium tetroxide and passed through the Beckman Coulter Multisizer to obtain cell size distributions. Insulin sensitivity was quantified by the modified insulin suppression test. Quantitative real-time PCR for adipose cell differentiation genes was performed for 11 subjects.
All individuals exhibited a bimodal cell size distribution. Contrary to expectations, the mean diameter of the larger cells was not significantly different between the insulin-sensitive and insulin-resistant individuals. Moreover, insulin resistance was associated with a higher ratio of small to large cells (1.66 +/- 1.03 vs 0.94 +/- 0.50, p = 0.01). Similar cell size distributions were observed for isolated adipose cells. The real-time PCR results showed two- to threefold lower expression of genes encoding markers of adipose cell differentiation (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma1 [PPARgamma1], PPARgamma2, GLUT4, adiponectin, sterol receptor element binding protein 1c) in insulin-resistant compared with insulin-sensitive individuals.
CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: These results suggest that after controlling for obesity, insulin resistance is associated with an expanded population of small adipose cells and decreased expression of differentiation markers, suggesting that impairment in adipose cell differentiation may contribute to obesity-associated insulin resistance.
目的/假设:肥胖易导致胰岛素抵抗的生物学机制尚不清楚。一种假设是,较大的脂肪细胞通过增加脂肪分解扰乱代谢。虽然研究表明细胞大小与体重指数(BMI)成比例增加,但尚未明确表明独立于BMI的脂肪细胞大小与胰岛素抵抗有关。本研究的目的是通过比较28名同样肥胖但健康的个体的脂肪细胞大小分布来检验这一广泛持有的假设,这些个体代表了经改良胰岛素抑制试验定义的胰岛素敏感性谱的两端。
取脐周皮下脂肪组织活检样本,用四氧化锇固定,通过贝克曼库尔特多参数细胞分析仪获得细胞大小分布。通过改良胰岛素抑制试验量化胰岛素敏感性。对11名受试者进行脂肪细胞分化基因的定量实时聚合酶链反应。
所有个体均表现出双峰细胞大小分布。与预期相反,胰岛素敏感个体和胰岛素抵抗个体中较大细胞的平均直径无显著差异。此外,胰岛素抵抗与小细胞与大细胞的比例较高有关(1.66±1.03对0.94±0.50,p = 0.01)。分离的脂肪细胞也观察到类似的细胞大小分布。实时聚合酶链反应结果显示,与胰岛素敏感个体相比,胰岛素抵抗个体中编码脂肪细胞分化标志物(过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体γ1 [PPARγ1]、PPARγ2、葡萄糖转运蛋白4、脂联素、固醇调节元件结合蛋白1c)的基因表达降低了两到三倍。
结论/解读:这些结果表明,在控制肥胖后,胰岛素抵抗与小脂肪细胞群体扩大和分化标志物表达降低有关,提示脂肪细胞分化受损可能导致肥胖相关的胰岛素抵抗。