CD36 缺乏症患者的微血管胰岛素抵抗与肌肉葡萄糖处置能力增强。

IF 8.4 1区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Cyndya A Shibao, Vivek S Peche, Terri A Pietka, Dmitri Samovski, Ian M Williams, Naji N Abumrad, Eric R Gamazon, Ira J Goldberg, David H Wasserman, Nada A Abumrad
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的/假设:微血管功能障碍会导致胰岛素抵抗。CD36是一种脂肪酸转运体和胰岛素信号调节器,在微血管内皮细胞中含量丰富。携带 CD36 编码变异 rs3211938 的小等位基因(G)的人类 CD36 表达减少 50%,并表现出内皮功能障碍。我们的目的是确定 G 等位基因携带者是否存在微血管对胰岛素的抵抗,如果有,这对葡萄糖处置有何影响:我们的多学科研究方法包括对 Cd36-/- 和野生型小鼠、CD36 缺乏 50% 的个体以及对照组进行高胰岛素血症-糖血症钳夹,此外还使用了有/无 CD36 缺失的原代人源性微血管内皮细胞:胰岛素钳夹显示,Cd36-/-小鼠在胰岛素刺激下的葡萄糖排出量增加,但血管顺应性和毛细血管灌注量减少。腓肠肌的肉眼显微镜检查显示,经毛细血管的胰岛素通量没有改变。CD36 基因缺陷的人类在胰岛素刺激下有更好的葡萄糖排出,但微血管血容量(MBV)对胰岛素无反应。缺失 CD36 的人体微血管细胞显示,胰岛素对 Akt、内皮 NO 合酶和 NO 生成的激活作用受损。因此,在 CD36 缺乏症中,微血管胰岛素抵抗与葡萄糖处置的胰岛素敏感性增强矛盾地联系在一起:CD36 缺乏症以前曾被证明会减少肌肉/心脏对脂肪酸的吸收,而在这里,我们发现它降低了血管顺应性和胰岛素增加 MBV 以优化葡萄糖和氧气输送的能力。肌肉和心脏通过转录重塑对这些能量挑战做出反应,使组织为胰岛素刺激的糖酵解通量做好准备。氧气输送量的减少会激活缺氧诱导因子、内皮细胞释放生长因子或细胞内小囊泡,这可能会介导这种适应。以 CD36 缺乏症患者的 NO 生物利用率为靶点,可能有益于微血管和肌肉/心脏的新陈代谢:Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03012386 数据可用性:本研究产生的 RNAseq 数据已存入 NCBI 基因表达总库 ( www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/ ),加入代码为 GSE235988 ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE235988 )。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Microvascular insulin resistance with enhanced muscle glucose disposal in CD36 deficiency.

Microvascular insulin resistance with enhanced muscle glucose disposal in CD36 deficiency.

Aims/hypothesis: Microvascular dysfunction contributes to insulin resistance. CD36, a fatty acid transporter and modulator of insulin signalling, is abundant in microvascular endothelial cells. Humans carrying the minor allele (G) of CD36 coding variant rs3211938 have 50% reduced CD36 expression and show endothelial dysfunction. We aimed to determine whether G allele carriers have microvascular resistance to insulin and, if so, how this affects glucose disposal.

Methods: Our multi-disciplinary approach included hyperinsulinaemic-euglycaemic clamps in Cd36-/- and wild-type mice, and in individuals with 50% CD36 deficiency, together with control counterparts, in addition to primary human-derived microvascular endothelial cells with/without CD36 depletion.

Results: Insulin clamps showed that Cd36-/- mice have enhanced insulin-stimulated glucose disposal but reduced vascular compliance and capillary perfusion. Intravital microscopy of the gastrocnemius showed unaltered transcapillary insulin flux. CD36-deficient humans had better insulin-stimulated glucose disposal but insulin-unresponsive microvascular blood volume (MBV). Human microvascular cells depleted of CD36 showed impaired insulin activation of Akt, endothelial NO synthase and NO generation. Thus, in CD36 deficiency, microvascular insulin resistance paradoxically associated with enhanced insulin sensitivity of glucose disposal.

Conclusions/interpretation: CD36 deficiency was previously shown to reduce muscle/heart fatty acid uptake, whereas here we showed that it reduced vascular compliance and the ability of insulin to increase MBV for optimising glucose and oxygen delivery. The muscle and heart respond to these energy challenges by transcriptional remodelling priming the tissue for insulin-stimulated glycolytic flux. Reduced oxygen delivery activating hypoxia-induced factors, endothelial release of growth factors or small intracellular vesicles might mediate this adaptation. Targeting NO bioavailability in CD36 deficiency could benefit the microvasculature and muscle/heart metabolism.

Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03012386 DATA AVAILABILITY: The RNAseq data generated in this study have been deposited in the NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus ( www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/ ) under accession code GSE235988 ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE235988 ).

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来源期刊
Diabetologia
Diabetologia 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
18.10
自引率
2.40%
发文量
193
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Diabetologia, the authoritative journal dedicated to diabetes research, holds high visibility through society membership, libraries, and social media. As the official journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, it is ranked in the top quartile of the 2019 JCR Impact Factors in the Endocrinology & Metabolism category. The journal boasts dedicated and expert editorial teams committed to supporting authors throughout the peer review process.
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