Viscarra Jose A, Rodriguez Ruben, Vazquez-Medina Jose Pablo, Lee Andrew, Tift Michael S, Tavoni Stephen K, Crocker Daniel E, Ortiz Rudy M
School of Natural Sciences, University of California, Merced.
Physiol Rep. 2013 Aug;1(2):e00023. doi: 10.1002/phy2.23.
Prolonged food deprivation increases lipid oxidation and utilization, which may contribute to the onset of the insulin resistance associated with fasting. Because insulin resistance promotes the preservation of glucose and oxidation of fat, it has been suggested to be an adaptive response to food deprivation. However, fasting mammals exhibit hypoinsulinemia, suggesting that the insulin resistance-like conditions they experience may actually result from reduced pancreatic sensitivity to glucose/capacity to secrete insulin. To determine whether fasting results in insulin resistance or in pancreatic dysfunction, we infused early- and late-fasted seals (naturally adapted to prolonged fasting) with insulin (0.065 U/kg), and a separate group of late-fasted seals with low (10 pM/kg) or high (100 pM/kg) dosages of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) immediately following a glucose bolus (0.5g/kg), and measured the systemic and cellular responses. Because GLP-1 facilitates glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, these infusions provide a method to assess pancreatic insulin-secreting capacity. Insulin infusions increased the phosphorylation of insulin receptor and Akt in adipose and muscle of early and late fasted seals; however the timing of the signaling response was blunted in adipose of late fasted seals. Despite the dose-dependent increases in insulin and increased glucose clearance (high dose), both GLP-1 dosages produced increases in plasma cortisol and glucagon, which may have contributed to the glucogenic role of GLP-1. Results suggest that fasting induces adipose-specific insulin resistance in elephant seal pups, while maintaining skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity, and therefore suggests that the onset of insulin resistance in fasting mammals is an evolved response to cope with prolonged food deprivation.
长期食物剥夺会增加脂质氧化和利用,这可能导致与禁食相关的胰岛素抵抗的发生。由于胰岛素抵抗促进葡萄糖的保存和脂肪的氧化,有人认为这是对食物剥夺的一种适应性反应。然而,禁食的哺乳动物表现出低胰岛素血症,这表明它们所经历的类似胰岛素抵抗的状况可能实际上是由于胰腺对葡萄糖的敏感性降低/分泌胰岛素的能力下降所致。为了确定禁食是导致胰岛素抵抗还是胰腺功能障碍,我们给早期和晚期禁食的海豹(自然适应长期禁食)注射胰岛素(0.065 U/kg),并在一组晚期禁食的海豹静脉推注葡萄糖(0.5g/kg)后立即注射低剂量(10 pM/kg)或高剂量(100 pM/kg)的胰高血糖素样肽-1(GLP-1),并测量全身和细胞反应。由于GLP-1促进葡萄糖刺激的胰岛素分泌,这些注射提供了一种评估胰腺胰岛素分泌能力的方法。胰岛素注射增加了早期和晚期禁食海豹脂肪和肌肉中胰岛素受体和Akt的磷酸化;然而,晚期禁食海豹脂肪中信号反应的时间变钝。尽管胰岛素剂量依赖性增加且葡萄糖清除率增加(高剂量),但两种GLP-1剂量均导致血浆皮质醇和胰高血糖素增加,这可能有助于GLP-1的生糖作用。结果表明,禁食在海象幼崽中诱导脂肪特异性胰岛素抵抗,同时保持骨骼肌胰岛素敏感性,因此表明禁食哺乳动物中胰岛素抵抗的发生是一种应对长期食物剥夺的进化反应。