Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90089, USA.
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2011 Jun;300(6):E1012-21. doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.00650.2010. Epub 2011 Mar 8.
Nicotinic acid (NA) has been used as a lipid drug for five decades. The lipid-lowering effects of NA are attributed to its ability to suppress lipolysis in adipocytes and lower plasma FFA levels. However, plasma FFA levels often rebound during NA treatment, offsetting some of the lipid-lowering effects of NA and/or causing insulin resistance, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. The present study was designed to determine whether a prolonged, continuous NA infusion in rats produces a FFA rebound and/or insulin resistance. NA infusion rapidly lowered plasma FFA levels (>60%, P < 0.01), and this effect was maintained for ≥5 h. However, when this infusion was extended to 24 h, plasma FFA levels rebounded to the levels of saline-infused control rats. This was not due to a downregulation of NA action, because when the NA infusion was stopped, plasma FFA levels rapidly increased more than twofold (P < 0.01), indicating that basal lipolysis was increased. Microarray analysis revealed many changes in gene expression in adipose tissue, which would contribute to the increase in basal lipolysis. In particular, phosphodiesterase-3B gene expression decreased significantly, which would increase cAMP levels and thus lipolysis. Hyperinsulinemic glucose clamps showed that insulin's action on glucose metabolism was improved during 24-h NA infusion but became impaired with increased plasma FFA levels after cessation of NA infusion. In conclusion, a 24-h continuous NA infusion in rats resulted in an FFA rebound, which appeared to be due to altered gene expression and increased basal lipolysis in adipose tissue. In addition, our data support a previous suggestion that insulin resistance develops as a result of FFA rebound during NA treatment. Thus, the present study provides an animal model and potential molecular mechanisms of FFA rebound and insulin resistance, observed in clinical studies with chronic NA treatment.
烟酸(NA)作为一种降脂药物已经使用了五十年。NA 的降脂作用归因于其抑制脂肪细胞脂肪分解和降低血浆游离脂肪酸(FFA)水平的能力。然而,在 NA 治疗期间,FFA 水平经常反弹,抵消了 NA 的一些降脂作用和/或导致胰岛素抵抗,但潜在机制尚不清楚。本研究旨在确定大鼠持续长时间输注 NA 是否会产生 FFA 反弹和/或胰岛素抵抗。NA 输注迅速降低血浆 FFA 水平(>60%,P < 0.01),这种作用至少持续 5 小时。然而,当输注延长至 24 小时时,血浆 FFA 水平反弹至盐水输注对照大鼠的水平。这不是由于 NA 作用的下调,因为当停止 NA 输注时,血浆 FFA 水平迅速增加两倍以上(P < 0.01),表明基础脂肪分解增加。微阵列分析显示脂肪组织中许多基因表达发生变化,这将有助于基础脂肪分解的增加。特别是,磷酸二酯酶 3B 基因表达显著降低,这将增加 cAMP 水平,从而促进脂肪分解。高胰岛素葡萄糖钳夹显示,在 24 小时 NA 输注期间,胰岛素对葡萄糖代谢的作用得到改善,但在停止 NA 输注后,随着血浆 FFA 水平的升高,其作用受损。总之,大鼠持续 24 小时输注 NA 导致 FFA 反弹,这似乎是由于脂肪组织中基因表达的改变和基础脂肪分解的增加所致。此外,我们的数据支持先前的观点,即胰岛素抵抗是由于 NA 治疗期间 FFA 反弹而发展的。因此,本研究提供了一种动物模型和潜在的分子机制,解释了临床研究中慢性 NA 治疗时观察到的 FFA 反弹和胰岛素抵抗。