55 results on '"Amanda E. Brandon"'
Search Results
2. Sex-specific effects of maternal dietary carbohydrate quality on fetal development and offspring metabolic phenotype in mice
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G. Jean Campbell, Sophie G. Lucic Fisher, Amanda E. Brandon, Alistair M. Senior, and Kim S. Bell-Anderson
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maternal diet ,glycemic index ,carbohydrate quality ,metabolism ,mice ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
ObjectivesIn utero glycemia is an important determinant of fetal growth. Women with gestational diabetes are more likely to deliver large-for-gestational age babies that are at increased risk for obesity. The maternal nutritional state modulates the development of offspring biological systems during the critical periods of gestation and lactation. Carbohydrate typically contributes most of the dietary energy, however, there are very few mechanistic studies investigating the effects of maternal dietary carbohydrate quality on fetal and offspring outcomes. Therefore, we sought to investigate the direct effects of maternal carbohydrate quality on sex-specific offspring metabolic programming.MethodsFemale C57BL/6 mice were fed one of five isocaloric diets: four high-sugar diets based on glucose, sucrose, isomaltulose or fructose (all containing 60% energy as carbohydrate), or a standard, minimally processed, chow diet, and were mated with chow-fed males. Half of the dams were sacrificed for fetus dissection and placental collection, with the remaining giving live birth. All dams were metabolically profiled before and during pregnancy, and pups were similarly profiled at 12 weeks of age.ResultsOverall, glucose-fed dams were heavier and fatter than chow or isomaltulose-fed dams. Female fetuses from glucose and isomaltulose-fed mothers weighed less and had smaller livers, than those from chow-fed mothers, with isomaltulose-fed female fetuses also having decreased placental mass. In contrast, male fetuses responded differently to the maternal diets, with heart mass being significantly increased when their mothers were fed fructose-containing diets, that is, sucrose, isomaltulose and fructose. High-sugar fed female offspring weighed the same, but were significantly fatter, than chow-fed offspring at 12 weeks of age, while glucose and isomaltulose-fed male pups displayed a similar phenotype to their mothers’.ConclusionWhile both glucose and isomaltulose diets constrained fetal growth in females, only placentas from isomaltulose-fed dams were significantly smaller than those from chow-fed mothers, suggesting the mechanisms through which fetal growth is reduced may be different. Female fetuses of isomaltulose-fed mothers were also lighter than sucrose-fed fetuses suggesting the glycemic index, or rate of glucose digestion and absorption, may be an important factor in determining nutrient availability to the growing fetus.
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- 2022
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3. Mitochondrial uncoupler BAM15 reverses diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance in mice
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Stephanie J. Alexopoulos, Sing-Young Chen, Amanda E. Brandon, Joseph M. Salamoun, Frances L. Byrne, Christopher J. Garcia, Martina Beretta, Ellen M. Olzomer, Divya P. Shah, Ashleigh M. Philp, Stefan R. Hargett, Robert T. Lawrence, Brendan Lee, James Sligar, Pascal Carrive, Simon P. Tucker, Andrew Philp, Carolin Lackner, Nigel Turner, Gregory J. Cooney, Webster L. Santos, and Kyle L. Hoehn
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Science - Abstract
Obesity is a global pandemic with limited treatment options. Here, the authors show evidence in mice that the mitochondrial uncoupler BAM15 effectively induces fat loss without affecting food intake or compromising lean body mass.
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- 2020
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4. Proteomic pathways to metabolic disease and type 2 diabetes in the pancreatic islet
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Belinda Yau, Sheyda Naghiloo, Alexis Diaz-Vegas, Austin V. Carr, Julian Van Gerwen, Elise J. Needham, Dillon Jevon, Sing-Young Chen, Kyle L. Hoehn, Amanda E. Brandon, Laurence Macia, Gregory J. Cooney, Michael R. Shortreed, Lloyd M. Smith, Mark P. Keller, Peter Thorn, Mark Larance, David E. James, Sean J. Humphrey, and Melkam A. Kebede
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animal physiology ,diabetology ,proteomics ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Pancreatic islets are essential for maintaining physiological blood glucose levels, and declining islet function is a hallmark of type 2 diabetes. We employ mass spectrometry-based proteomics to systematically analyze islets from 9 genetic or diet-induced mouse models representing a broad cross-section of metabolic health. Quantifying the islet proteome to a depth of >11,500 proteins, this study represents the most detailed analysis of mouse islet proteins to date. Our data highlight that the majority of islet proteins are expressed in all strains and diets, but more than half of the proteins vary in expression levels, principally due to genetics. Associating these varied protein expression levels on an individual animal basis with individual phenotypic measures reveals islet mitochondrial function as a major positive indicator of metabolic health regardless of strain. This compendium of strain-specific and dietary changes to mouse islet proteomes represents a comprehensive resource for basic and translational islet cell biology.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Reduced insulin action in muscle of high fat diet rats over the diurnal cycle is not associated with defective insulin signaling
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Lewin Small, Amanda E. Brandon, Benjamin L. Parker, Vinita Deshpande, Azrah F. Samsudeen, Greg M. Kowalski, Jane Reznick, Donna L. Wilks, Elaine Preston, Clinton R. Bruce, David E. James, Nigel Turner, and Gregory J. Cooney
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Internal medicine ,RC31-1245 - Abstract
Objective: Energy metabolism and insulin action follow a diurnal rhythm. It is therefore important that investigations into dysregulation of these pathways are relevant to the physiology of this diurnal rhythm. Methods: We examined glucose uptake, markers of insulin action, and the phosphorylation of insulin signaling intermediates in muscle of chow and high fat, high sucrose (HFHS) diet-fed rats over the normal diurnal cycle. Results: HFHS animals displayed hyperinsulinemia but had reduced systemic glucose disposal and lower muscle glucose uptake during the feeding period. Analysis of gene expression, enzyme activity, protein abundance and phosphorylation revealed a clear diurnal regulation of substrate oxidation pathways with no difference in Akt signaling in muscle. Transfection of a constitutively active Akt2 into the muscle of HFHS rats did not rescue diet-induced reductions in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. Conclusions: These studies suggest that reduced glucose uptake in muscle during the diurnal cycle induced by short-term HFHS-feeding is not the result of reduced insulin signaling. Keywords: Insulin action, Glucose uptake, Skeletal muscle, Insulin signaling, Diurnal rhythms, Phosphoproteomics
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- 2019
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6. A selective inhibitor of ceramide synthase 1 reveals a novel role in fat metabolism
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Nigel Turner, Xin Ying Lim, Hamish D. Toop, Brenna Osborne, Amanda E. Brandon, Elysha N. Taylor, Corrine E. Fiveash, Hemna Govindaraju, Jonathan D. Teo, Holly P. McEwen, Timothy A. Couttas, Stephen M. Butler, Abhirup Das, Greg M. Kowalski, Clinton R. Bruce, Kyle L. Hoehn, Thomas Fath, Carsten Schmitz-Peiffer, Gregory J. Cooney, Magdalene K. Montgomery, Jonathan C. Morris, and Anthony S. Don
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Science - Abstract
Ceramides are signalling molecules that regulate several physiological functions including insulin sensitivity. Here the authors report a selective ceramide synthase 1 inhibitor that counteracts lipid accumulation within the muscle and adiposity by increasing fatty acid oxidation but without affecting insulin sensitivity in mice fed with an obesogenic diet.
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- 2018
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7. Macronutrient Determinants of Obesity, Insulin Resistance and Metabolic Health
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Jibran A. Wali, Samantha M. Solon-Biet, Therese Freire, and Amanda E. Brandon
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insulin resistance ,macronutrients ,obesity ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Obesity caused by the overconsumption of calories has increased to epidemic proportions. Insulin resistance is often associated with an increased adiposity and is a precipitating factor in the development of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and altered metabolic health. Of the various factors contributing to metabolic impairments, nutrition is the major modifiable factor that can be targeted to counter the rising prevalence of obesity and metabolic diseases. However, the macronutrient composition of a nutritionally balanced “healthy diet” are unclear, and so far, no tested dietary intervention has been successful in achieving long-term compliance and reductions in body weight and associated beneficial health outcomes. In the current review, we briefly describe the role of the three major macronutrients, carbohydrates, fats, and proteins, and their role in metabolic health, and provide mechanistic insights. We also discuss how an integrated multi-dimensional approach to nutritional science could help in reconciling apparently conflicting findings.
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- 2021
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8. Hepatic Lipid Droplet-Associated Proteome Changes Distinguish Dietary-Induced Fatty Liver from Insulin Resistance in Male Mice
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Andries Van Woerkom, Dylan J Harney, Shilpa R. Nagarajan, Mariam F. Hakeem-Sanni, Jinfeng Lin, Matthew Hooke, Tamara Pulpitel, Gregory J Cooney, Mark Larance, Darren N. Saunders, Amanda E Brandon, and Andrew J. Hoy
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Fatty liver is characterised by the expansion of lipid droplets and is associated with the development of many metabolic diseases, including insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia and cardiovascular disease. We assessed the morphology of hepatic lipid droplets and performed quantitative proteomics in lean, glucose-tolerant mice compared to high-fat diet (HFD) fed mice that displayed hepatic steatosis and glucose intolerance as well as high-starch diet (HStD) fed mice who exhibited similar levels of hepatic steatosis but remained glucose tolerant. Both HFD and HStD-fed mice had more and larger lipid droplets than Chow-fed animals. We observed striking differences in liver lipid droplet proteomes of HFD and HStD-fed mice compared to Chow-fed mice, with fewer differences between HFD and HStD. Taking advantage of our diet strategy, we identified a fatty liver lipid droplet proteome consisting of proteins common in HFD- and HStD-fed mice. Likewise, a proteome associated with glucose tolerance that included proteins common in Chow and HStD but not HFD-fed mice was identified. Notably, glucose intolerance was associated with changes in the ratio of adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) to perilipin 5 (PLIN5) in the lipid droplet proteome, suggesting dysregulation of neutral lipid homeostasis in glucose-intolerant fatty liver, which supports bioactive lipid synthesis and impairs hepatic insulin action. We conclude that our novel dietary approach uncouples ectopic lipid burden from insulin resistance-associated changes in the hepatic lipid droplet proteome.
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- 2023
9. Insulin sensitivity is preserved in mice made obese by feeding a high starch diet
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Lewin Small, Amanda E Brandon, Tuong-Vi Nguyen, Eurwin Suryana, Henry Gong, Christian Yassmin, Sarah E Hancock, Tamara Pulpitel, Sophie Stonehouse, Letisha Prescott, Melkam A Kebede, Belinda Yau, Lake-Ee Quek, Greg M Kowalski, Clinton R Bruce, Nigel Turner, and Gregory J Cooney
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General Immunology and Microbiology ,General Neuroscience ,Mice, Obese ,Starch ,General Medicine ,Diet, High-Fat ,Ceramides ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Mice ,Glucose ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Glucose Intolerance ,Animals ,Insulin ,Obesity ,Insulin Resistance - Abstract
Obesity is generally associated with insulin resistance in liver and muscle and increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes, however there is a population of obese people that remain insulin sensitive. Similarly, recent work suggests that mice fed high carbohydrate diets can become obese without apparent glucose intolerance. To investigate this phenomenon further, we fed mice either a high fat (Hi-F) or high starch (Hi-ST) diet and measured adiposity, glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity and tissue lipids compared to control mice fed a standard laboratory chow. Both Hi-ST and Hi-F mice accumulated a similar amount of fat and tissue triglyceride compared to chow-fed mice. However while Hi-F diet mice developed glucose intolerance as well as liver and muscle insulin resistance (assessed via euglycemic/hyperinsulinemic clamp), obese Hi-ST mice maintained glucose tolerance and insulin action similar to lean, chow-fed controls. This preservation of insulin action despite obesity in Hi-ST mice was associated with differences in de novo lipogenesis and levels of C22:0 ceramide in liver and C18:0 ceramide in muscle. This indicates that dietary manipulation can influence insulin action independently of the level of adiposity and that the presence of specific ceramide species correlate with these differences.
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- 2022
10. Author response: Insulin sensitivity is preserved in mice made obese by feeding a high starch diet
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Lewin Small, Amanda E Brandon, Tuong-Vi Nguyen, Eurwin Suryana, Henry Gong, Christian Yassmin, Sarah E Hancock, Tamara Pulpitel, Sophie Stonehouse, Letisha Prescott, Melkam A Kebede, Belinda Yau, Lake-Ee Quek, Greg M Kowalski, Clinton R Bruce, Nigel Turner, and Gregory J Cooney
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- 2022
11. Impact of dietary carbohydrate type and protein–carbohydrate interaction on metabolic health
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Glen P Lockwood, Josephine M. Forbes, Belinda Yau, Alistair M. Senior, Amanda E. Brandon, Samantha M. Solon-Biet, David Raubenheimer, Rosilene V Ribeiro, John F. O'Sullivan, David G. Le Couteur, Alison W S Luk, Kim S. Bell-Anderson, Gregory J. Cooney, Annabelle J. Milner, Andrew J. Holmes, Harrison J. W. Facey, Mitchell A. Sullivan, Jibran A Wali, Victoria C. Cogger, Stephen J. Simpson, Melkam A. Kebede, Tamara Pulpitel, Tim Dodgson, Laurence Macia, Yen Chin Koay, and Devin Wahl
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Male ,food.ingredient ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,Health Status ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Biology ,Gut flora ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,Nutrient ,Physiology (medical) ,Dietary Carbohydrates ,Internal Medicine ,Animals ,Homeostasis ,Monosaccharide ,Obesity ,Food science ,Resistant starch ,030304 developmental biology ,2. Zero hunger ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Starch ,Fructose ,Cell Biology ,Carbohydrate ,biology.organism_classification ,Diet ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Dietary Proteins ,Energy Metabolism - Abstract
Reduced protein intake, through dilution with carbohydrate, extends lifespan and improves mid-life metabolic health in animal models. However, with transition to industrialised food systems, reduced dietary protein is associated with poor health outcomes in humans. Here we systematically interrogate the impact of carbohydrate quality in diets with varying carbohydrate and protein content. Studying 700 male mice on 33 isocaloric diets, we find that the type of carbohydrate and its digestibility profoundly shape the behavioural and physiological responses to protein dilution, modulate nutrient processing in the liver and alter the gut microbiota. Low (10%)-protein, high (70%)-carbohydrate diets promote the healthiest metabolic outcomes when carbohydrate comprises resistant starch (RS), yet the worst outcomes were with a 50:50 mixture of monosaccharides fructose and glucose. Our findings could explain the disparity between healthy, high-carbohydrate diets and the obesogenic impact of protein dilution by glucose-fructose mixtures associated with highly processed diets.
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- 2021
12. The PI3K pathway preserves metabolic health through MARCO-dependent lipid uptake by adipose tissue macrophages
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Martina Kerndl, Alexander Hajto, Gernot Schabbauer, Paulina M. Dominiak, Mark A. Febbraio, Melanie Hofmann, Emma Estevez, Amanda E. Brandon, Andrea Vogel, Marta Kulik, Kristaps Klavins, Jörg Menche, Florian Gruber, Mario Kuttke, Lucia Quemada Garrido, Andreas Bergthaler, Ana Korosec, Casey L. Egan, Martina Schweiger, Alexander Lercher, Ildiko Mesteri, Thomas Weichhart, Marlene Pühringer, Omar Sharif, Maria W. Górna, Markus Kieler, Michael Caldera, and Julia S. Brunner
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Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Adipose tissue macrophages ,Population ,Biology ,Mice ,Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases ,Metabolic Diseases ,Physiology (medical) ,Adipocytes ,Internal Medicine ,Animals ,Tensin ,PTEN ,Obesity ,Receptors, Immunologic ,education ,PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,education.field_of_study ,Chimera ,Catabolism ,Macrophages ,PTEN Phosphohydrolase ,Cell Differentiation ,Cell Biology ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,Lipid Metabolism ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Macrophage receptor with collagenous structure ,Adipose Tissue ,Lipotoxicity ,Lipidomics ,biology.protein ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Adipose tissue macrophages (ATMs) display tremendous heterogeneity depending on signals in their local microenvironment and contribute to the pathogenesis of obesity. The phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signalling pathway, antagonized by the phosphatase and tensin homologue (PTEN), is important for metabolic responses to obesity. We hypothesized that fluctuations in macrophage-intrinsic PI3K activity via PTEN could alter the trajectory of metabolic disease by driving distinct ATM populations. Using mice harbouring macrophage-specific PTEN deletion or bone marrow chimeras carrying additional PTEN copies, we demonstrate that sustained PI3K activity in macrophages preserves metabolic health in obesity by preventing lipotoxicity. Myeloid PI3K signalling promotes a beneficial ATM population characterized by lipid uptake, catabolism and high expression of the scavenger macrophage receptor with collagenous structure (MARCO). Dual MARCO and myeloid PTEN deficiencies prevent the generation of lipid-buffering ATMs, reversing the beneficial actions of elevated myeloid PI3K activity in metabolic disease. Thus, macrophage-intrinsic PI3K signalling boosts metabolic health by driving ATM programmes associated with MARCO-dependent lipid uptake. The PI3K–PTEN signalling pathway is a central regulator of metabolic homeostasis. Brunner et al. find that cell-intrinsic PI3K signalling allows adipose tissue macrophages to buffer obesity-induced lipotoxicity by promoting lipid uptake and catabolism.
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- 2020
13. Sex‐specific metabolic responses to 6 hours of fasting during the active phase in young mice
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Luke Hatchwell, Devin Wahl, Ruth Perks, Alistair M. Senior, David G. Le Couteur, Gregory J. Cooney, Amanda E. Brandon, Ximonie Clark, Therese Freire, Samantha M. Solon-Biet, Stephen J. Simpson, Tamara Pulpitel, and Mark Larance
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Physiology ,Period (gene) ,Context (language use) ,Impaired glucose tolerance ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Active phase ,Glucose Intolerance ,medicine ,Animals ,Obesity ,Circadian rhythm ,10. No inequality ,2. Zero hunger ,Sex Characteristics ,business.industry ,Fasting ,medicine.disease ,Sex specific ,030104 developmental biology ,Lipogenesis ,Body Composition ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Key points Night time/active phase food restriction for 6 h impaired glucose intolerance in young male and female mice. Females displayed increased capacity for lipogenesis and triglyceride storage in response to a short daily fast. Females had lower fasting insulin levels and an increased potential for utilizing fat for energy through β-oxidation compared to males. The need for the inclusion of both sexes, and the treatment of sex as an independent variable, is emphasized within the context of this fasting regime. Abstract There is growing interest in understanding the mechanistic significance and benefits of fasting physiology in combating obesity. Increasing the fasting phase of a normal day can promote restoration and repair mechanisms that occur during the post-absorptive period. Most studies exploring the effect of restricting food access on mitigating obesity have done so with a large bias towards the use of male mice. Here, we disentangle the roles of sex, food intake and food withdrawal in the response to a short-term daily fasting intervention, in which food was removed for 6 h in the dark/active phase of young, 8-week-old mice. We showed that the removal of food during the dark phase impaired glucose tolerance in males and females, possibly due to the circadian disruption induced by this feeding protocol. Although both sexes demonstrated similar patterns of food intake, body composition and various metabolic markers, there were clear sex differences in the magnitude and extent of these responses. While females displayed enhanced capacity for lipogenesis and triglyceride storage, they also had low fasting insulin levels and an increased potential for utilizing available energy sources such as fat for energy through β-oxidation. Our results highlight the intrinsic biological and metabolic disparities between male and female mice, emphasizing the growing need for the inclusion of both sexes in scientific research. Furthermore, our results illustrate sex-specific metabolic pathways that regulate lipogenesis, obesity and overall metabolic health.
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- 2020
14. Systems-level analysis of insulin action in mouse strains provides insight into tissue- and pathway-specific interactions that drive insulin resistance
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Marin E. Nelson, Søren Madsen, Kristen C. Cooke, Andreas M. Fritzen, Ida H. Thorius, Stewart W.C. Masson, Luke Carroll, Fiona C. Weiss, Marcus M. Seldin, Meg Potter, Samantha L. Hocking, Daniel J. Fazakerley, Amanda E. Brandon, Senthil Thillainadesan, Alistair M. Senior, Gregory J. Cooney, Jacqueline Stöckli, David E. James, Fazakerley, Daniel [0000-0001-8241-2903], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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adipose ,obesity ,Physiology ,Cell Biology ,glycolysis ,GxE ,glucose uptake ,Mice ,proteomics ,Adipose Tissue ,insulin resistance ,Adipocytes ,Animals ,Insulin ,Western diet ,skeletal muscle ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Molecular Biology ,metabolism - Abstract
Skeletal muscle and adipose tissue insulin resistance are major drivers of metabolic disease. To uncover pathways involved in insulin resistance, specifically in these tissues, we leveraged the metabolic diversity of different dietary exposures and discrete inbred mouse strains. This revealed that muscle insulin resistance was driven by gene-by-environment interactions and was strongly correlated with hyperinsulinemia and decreased levels of ten key glycolytic enzymes. Remarkably, there was no relationship between muscle and adipose tissue insulin action. Adipocyte size profoundly varied across strains and diets, and this was strongly correlated with adipose tissue insulin resistance. The A/J strain, in particular, exhibited marked adipocyte insulin resistance and hypertrophy despite robust muscle insulin responsiveness, challenging the role of adipocyte hypertrophy per se in systemic insulin resistance. These data demonstrate that muscle and adipose tissue insulin resistance can occur independently and underscore the need for tissue-specific interrogation to understand metabolic disease.
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- 2022
15. Proteomic pathways to metabolic disease and type 2 diabetes in the pancreatic islet
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Gregory J. Cooney, Alexis Diaz-Vegas, Dillon Jevon, Sheyda Naghiloo, Kyle L. Hoehn, Sing-Young Chen, Belinda Yau, Melkam A. Kebede, Austin V Carr, Amanda E. Brandon, Elise J. Needham, Lloyd M. Smith, Mark P. Keller, David E. James, Michael R. Shortreed, Mark Larance, Sean J. Humphrey, Julian Van Gerwen, Laurance Macia, and Peter Thorn
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geography ,endocrine system ,Multidisciplinary ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,endocrine system diseases ,Pancreatic islets ,Strain (biology) ,diabetology ,Science ,Type 2 diabetes ,Biology ,Proteomics ,Islet ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Article ,Cell biology ,animal physiology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,proteomics ,Proteome ,medicine ,Function (biology) - Abstract
Summary Pancreatic islets are essential for maintaining physiological blood glucose levels, and declining islet function is a hallmark of type 2 diabetes. We employ mass spectrometry-based proteomics to systematically analyze islets from 9 genetic or diet-induced mouse models representing a broad cross-section of metabolic health. Quantifying the islet proteome to a depth of >11,500 proteins, this study represents the most detailed analysis of mouse islet proteins to date. Our data highlight that the majority of islet proteins are expressed in all strains and diets, but more than half of the proteins vary in expression levels, principally due to genetics. Associating these varied protein expression levels on an individual animal basis with individual phenotypic measures reveals islet mitochondrial function as a major positive indicator of metabolic health regardless of strain. This compendium of strain-specific and dietary changes to mouse islet proteomes represents a comprehensive resource for basic and translational islet cell biology., Graphical abstract, Highlights • Most comprehensive mouse islet proteome library generated to date • Quantification of islet proteomic changes across 6 strains of mice on 2 diets • Islet mitochondrial function revealed as strain-independent regulator of metabolic health, Animal physiology; Diabetology; Proteomics.
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- 2021
16. Regulation of mitochondrial metabolism in murine skeletal muscle by the medium‐chain fatty acid receptor Gpr84
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Ashley Hertzog, Trevor J. Biden, Josephine Yu, Nigel Turner, Adviye Ayper Tolun, Nicola J. Smith, Simon H. J. Brown, Azrah Samsudeen, Gregory J. Cooney, Amanda E. Brandon, Beena Devanapalli, Corrine E. Fiveash, Todd W. Mitchell, Magdalene K. Montgomery, Brenna Osborne, Liam O’Reilly, Brendan P. Wilkins, Tomas Kavanagh, and Antony A. Cooper
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adipose tissue ,Mitochondrion ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Biochemistry ,Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Research ,Skeletal muscle ,Fatty acid ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,Mitochondria, Muscle ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Glucose ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Mitochondrial biogenesis ,Body Composition ,Insulin Resistance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Fatty acid receptors have been recognized as important players in glycaemic control. This study is the first to describe a role for the medium‐chain fatty acid (MCFA) receptor G‐protein‐coupled receptor (Gpr) 84 in skeletal muscle mitochondrial function and insulin secretion. We are able to show that Gpr84 is highly expressed in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue. Mice with global deletion of Gpr84 [Gpr84 knockout (KO)] exhibit a mild impairment in glucose tolerance when fed a MCFA‐enriched diet. Studies in mice and pancreatic islets suggest that glucose intolerance is accompanied by a defect in insulin secretion. MCFA‐fed KO mice also exhibit a significant impairment in the intrinsic respiratory capacity of their skeletal muscle mitochondria, but at the same time also exhibit a substantial increase in mitochondrial content. Changes in canonical pathways of mitochondrial biogenesis and turnover are unable to explain these mitochondrial differences. Our results show that Gpr84 plays a crucial role in regulating mitochondrial function and quality control.—Montgomery, M. K., Osborne, B., Brandon, A. E., O'Reilly, L., Fiveash, C. E., Brown, S. H. J., Wilkins, B. P., Samsudeen, A., Yu, J., Devanapalli, B., Hertzog, A., Tolun, A. A., Kavanagh, T., Cooper, A. A., Mitchell, T. W., Biden, T. J., Smith, N. J., Cooney, G. J., Turner, N. Regulation of mitochondrial metabolism in murine skeletal muscle by the medium‐chain fatty acid receptor Gpr84. FASEB J. 33, 12264‐12276 (2019). www.fasebj.org
- Published
- 2019
17. Reduced insulin action in muscle of high fat diet rats over the diurnal cycle is not associated with defective insulin signaling
- Author
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Greg M. Kowalski, Lewin Small, Vinita Deshpande, David E. James, Amanda E. Brandon, Elaine Preston, Benjamin L. Parker, Clinton R. Bruce, Gregory J. Cooney, Donna Wilks, Azrah Samsudeen, Jane Reznick, and Nigel Turner
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Blood Glucose ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Glucose uptake ,Skeletal muscle ,Gene Expression ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hyperinsulinemia ,Insulin ,Phosphorylation ,biology ,Chemistry ,Circadian Rhythm ,Insulin signaling ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Original Article ,Signal Transduction ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Internal medicine ,Diurnal rhythms ,Phosphoproteomics ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Diet, High-Fat ,03 medical and health sciences ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Rats, Wistar ,Muscle, Skeletal ,lcsh:RC31-1245 ,Molecular Biology ,Protein kinase B ,Insulin action ,Cell Biology ,Metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,Insulin receptor ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,biology.protein ,Insulin Resistance ,Energy Metabolism ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt - Abstract
Objective Energy metabolism and insulin action follow a diurnal rhythm. It is therefore important that investigations into dysregulation of these pathways are relevant to the physiology of this diurnal rhythm. Methods We examined glucose uptake, markers of insulin action, and the phosphorylation of insulin signaling intermediates in muscle of chow and high fat, high sucrose (HFHS) diet-fed rats over the normal diurnal cycle. Results HFHS animals displayed hyperinsulinemia but had reduced systemic glucose disposal and lower muscle glucose uptake during the feeding period. Analysis of gene expression, enzyme activity, protein abundance and phosphorylation revealed a clear diurnal regulation of substrate oxidation pathways with no difference in Akt signaling in muscle. Transfection of a constitutively active Akt2 into the muscle of HFHS rats did not rescue diet-induced reductions in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. Conclusions These studies suggest that reduced glucose uptake in muscle during the diurnal cycle induced by short-term HFHS-feeding is not the result of reduced insulin signaling., Highlights • Investigating metabolism in rodents over the diurnal cycle more accurately models normal animal physiology. • Diurnal regulation of substrate oxidation is altered in muscle of HFHS-fed rats. • There is a disconnect between glucose uptake and canonical insulin signaling in muscle. • Activation of Akt2 does not rescue diet-induced reductions in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in muscle.
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- 2019
18. Branched-chain amino acids impact health and lifespan indirectly via amino acid balance and appetite control
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Linda Partridge, Ruth Perks, Gabrielle C. Gregoriou, Jibran A Wali, Samantha M. Solon-Biet, Ximonie Clark, Qiao-Ping Wang, Gunbjørg Svineng, Paula Juricic, Clare Atkinson, Timothy Dodgson, David G. Le Couteur, Kim S. Bell-Anderson, Stephen J. Simpson, Tamara Pulpitel, Elena E. Bagley, Belinda Yau, Alistair M. Senior, Adam J. Rose, Amanda E. Brandon, Victoria C. Cogger, Gregory J. Cooney, Melkam A. Kebede, Matthew D.W. Piper, David Raubenheimer, Yen Chin Koay, Devin Wahl, and John F. O'Sullivan
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Male ,Serotonin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Calorie restriction ,Hypothalamus ,Hyperphagia ,Article ,Mice ,Life Expectancy ,Insulin resistance ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Obesity ,Amino Acids ,Threonine ,media_common ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Appetite Regulation ,Chemistry ,Tryptophan ,Appetite ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Amino acid ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Ageing ,Female ,Insulin Resistance ,Amino Acids, Branched-Chain - Abstract
Elevated branched chain amino acids (BCAAs) are associated with obesity and insulin resistance. How long-term dietary BCAAs impact late-life health and lifespan is unknown. Here, we show that when dietary BCAAs are varied against a fixed, isocaloric macronutrient background, long-term exposure to high BCAA diets leads to hyperphagia, obesity and reduced lifespan. These effects are not due to elevated BCAA per se or hepatic mTOR activation, but rather due to a shift in the relative quantity of dietary BCAAs and other AAs, notably tryptophan and threonine. Increasing the ratio of BCAAs to these AAs resulted in hyperphagia and is associated with central serotonin depletion. Preventing hyperphagia by calorie restriction or pair-feeding averts the health costs of a high BCAA diet. Our data highlight a role for amino acid quality in energy balance and show that health costs of chronic high BCAA intakes need not be due to intrinsic toxicity but, rather, a consequence of hyperphagia driven by AA imbalance.
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- 2019
19. Thermoneutral housing does not influence fat mass or glucose homeostasis in C57BL/6 mice
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Amanda E. Brandon, Lewin Small, Gregory J. Cooney, Henry Gong, and Christian Yassmin
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,C57BL/6 ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rodent ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Diet, High-Fat ,Fat mass ,03 medical and health sciences ,Endocrinology ,Adipose Tissue, Brown ,biology.animal ,Internal medicine ,Brown adipose tissue ,medicine ,Animals ,Insulin ,Glucose homeostasis ,Triglycerides ,Uncoupling Protein 1 ,Arc (protein) ,biology ,Muscles ,Body Weight ,Temperature ,Skeletal muscle ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,biology.organism_classification ,Housing, Animal ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Glucose ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,Body Composition ,Carbohydrate Metabolism ,Energy Intake ,Energy Metabolism - Abstract
One major factor affecting physiology often overlooked when comparing data from animal models and humans is the effect of ambient temperature. The majority of rodent housing is maintained at ~22°C, the thermoneutral temperature for lightly clothed humans. However, mice have a much higher thermoneutral temperature of ~30°C, consequently data collected at 22°C in mice could be influenced by animals being exposed to a chronic cold stress. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of housing temperature on glucose homeostasis and energy metabolism of mice fed normal chow or a high-fat, obesogenic diet (HFD). Male C57BL/6J(Arc) mice were housed at standard temperature (22°C) or at thermoneutrality (29°C) and fed either chow or a 60% HFD for 13 weeks. The HFD increased fat mass and produced glucose intolerance as expected but this was not exacerbated in mice housed at thermoneutrality. Changing the ambient temperature, however, did alter energy expenditure, food intake, lipid content and glucose metabolism in skeletal muscle, liver and brown adipose tissue. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that mice regulate energy balance at different housing temperatures to maintain whole-body glucose tolerance and adiposity irrespective of the diet. Despite this, metabolic differences in individual tissues were apparent. In conclusion, dietary intervention in mice has a greater impact on adiposity and glucose metabolism than housing temperature although temperature is still a significant factor in regulating metabolic parameters in individual tissues.
- Published
- 2018
20. Nutritional reprogramming of mouse liver proteome is dampened by metformin, resveratrol, and rapamycin
- Author
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Nicholas J. Hunt, Rahul Gokarn, Samantha M. Solon-Biet, David E. James, Alistair M. Senior, David G. Le Couteur, Gregory J. Cooney, Stephen J. Simpson, Amanda E. Brandon, Benjamin L. Parker, Tamara Pulpitel, David Raubenheimer, Jibran A Wali, and Victoria C. Cogger
- Subjects
Spliceosome ,endocrine system diseases ,Proteome ,Physiology ,Nutrient sensing ,Mitochondrion ,Pharmacology ,Biology ,Resveratrol ,medicine.disease_cause ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Sirolimus ,Cell Biology ,Metformin ,Metabolic pathway ,chemistry ,Liver ,Oxidative stress ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Nutrient sensing pathways influence metabolic health and aging, offering the possibility that diet might be used therapeutically, alone or with drugs targeting these pathways. We used the Geometric Framework for Nutrition to study interactive and comparative effects of diet and drugs on the hepatic proteome in mice across 40 dietary treatments differing in macronutrient ratios, energy density, and drug treatment (metformin, rapamycin, resveratrol). There was a strong negative correlation between dietary energy and the spliceosome and a strong positive correlation between dietary protein and mitochondria, generating oxidative stress at high protein intake. Metformin, rapamycin, and resveratrol had lesser effects than and dampened responses to diet. Rapamycin and metformin reduced mitochondrial responses to dietary protein while the effects of carbohydrates and fat were downregulated by resveratrol. Dietary composition has a powerful impact on the hepatic proteome, not just on metabolic pathways but fundamental processes such as mitochondrial function and RNA splicing.
- Published
- 2021
21. Mitochondrial uncoupler BAM15 reverses diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance in mice
- Author
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Carolin Lackner, Robert T. Lawrence, Brendan Lee, Christopher J Garcia, Nigel Turner, Ellen M. Olzomer, Amanda E. Brandon, Joseph M. Salamoun, Divya P. Shah, Sing-Young Chen, Ashleigh M. Philp, Andrew Philp, Simon P. Tucker, Stephanie J. Alexopoulos, Pascal Carrive, Stefan R. Hargett, Webster L. Santos, Kyle L. Hoehn, Frances L. Byrne, James Sligar, Martina Beretta, and Gregory J. Cooney
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Antioxidant ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Administration, Oral ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,Body Temperature ,Mice ,lcsh:Science ,Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial ,Oxadiazoles ,Multidisciplinary ,Glucose clamp technique ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Metabolic syndrome ,Mitochondria ,Dose–response relationship ,Adipose Tissue ,Liver ,Pyrazines ,Toxicity ,0210 nano-technology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Science ,Diamines ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Obesity ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Insulin ,Body Weight ,General Chemistry ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,Oxidative Stress ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Diet, Western ,Glucose Clamp Technique ,Lean body mass ,lcsh:Q ,Insulin Resistance ,business - Abstract
Obesity is a health problem affecting more than 40% of US adults and 13% of the global population. Anti-obesity treatments including diet, exercise, surgery and pharmacotherapies have so far failed to reverse obesity incidence. Herein, we target obesity with a pharmacotherapeutic approach that decreases caloric efficiency by mitochondrial uncoupling. We show that a recently identified mitochondrial uncoupler BAM15 is orally bioavailable, increases nutrient oxidation, and decreases body fat mass without altering food intake, lean body mass, body temperature, or biochemical and haematological markers of toxicity. BAM15 decreases hepatic fat, decreases inflammatory lipids, and has strong antioxidant effects. Hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp studies show that BAM15 improves insulin sensitivity in multiple tissue types. Collectively, these data demonstrate that pharmacologic mitochondrial uncoupling with BAM15 has powerful anti-obesity and insulin sensitizing effects without compromising lean mass or affecting food intake., Obesity is a global pandemic with limited treatment options. Here, the authors show evidence in mice that the mitochondrial uncoupler BAM15 effectively induces fat loss without affecting food intake or compromising lean body mass.
- Published
- 2020
22. Increasing Acyl CoA thioesterase activity alters phospholipid profile without effect on insulin action in skeletal muscle of rats
- Author
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Eurwin Suryana, Simon H. J. Brown, Amanda E. Brandon, Ishita Bakshi, Todd W. Mitchell, Nigel Turner, and Gregory J. Cooney
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Glucose uptake ,lcsh:Medicine ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,Rats, Wistar ,Muscle, Skeletal ,lcsh:Science ,Beta oxidation ,Phospholipids ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Multidisciplinary ,Fatty acid metabolism ,lcsh:R ,Fatty acid ,Skeletal muscle ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Palmitoyl-CoA Hydrolase ,ACOT7 ,lcsh:Q ,Acyl Coenzyme A ,Insulin Resistance ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
Increased lipid metabolism in muscle is associated with insulin resistance and therefore, many strategies have been employed to alter fatty acid metabolism and study the impact on insulin action. Metabolism of fatty acid requires activation to fatty acyl CoA by Acyl CoA synthases (ACSL) and fatty acyl CoA can be hydrolysed by Acyl CoA thioesterases (Acot). Thioesterase activity is low in muscle, so we overexpressed Acot7 in muscle of chow and high-fat diet (HFD) rats and investigated effects on insulin action. Acot7 overexpression modified specific phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine species in tibialis muscle of chow rats to levels similar to those observed in control HFD muscle. The changes in phospholipid species did not alter glucose uptake in tibialis muscle under hyperinsulinaemic/euglycaemic clamped conditions. Acot7 overexpression in white extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle increased complete fatty acid oxidation ex-vivo but was not associated with any changes in glucose uptake in-vivo, however overexpression of Acot7 in red EDL reduced insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in-vivo which correlated with increased incomplete fatty acid oxidation ex-vivo. In summary, although overexpression of Acot7 in muscle altered some aspects of lipid profile and metabolism in muscle, this had no major effect on insulin-stimulated glucose uptake.
- Published
- 2018
23. A selective inhibitor of ceramide synthase 1 reveals a novel role in fat metabolism
- Author
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Kyle L. Hoehn, Corrine E. Fiveash, Greg M. Kowalski, Jonathan D. Teo, Carsten Schmitz-Peiffer, Timothy A. Couttas, Hemna Govindaraju, Magdalene K. Montgomery, Gregory J. Cooney, Amanda E. Brandon, Anthony S. Don, Brenna Osborne, Jonathan C. Morris, Nigel Turner, Abhirup Das, Holly P. McEwen, Thomas Fath, Hamish D. Toop, Elysha N. Taylor, Xin Ying Lim, Clinton R. Bruce, and Stephen M. Butler
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Ceramide ,Science ,Cell Respiration ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Adipose tissue ,Diet, High-Fat ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Inhibitory Concentration 50 ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Insulin resistance ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Muscle, Skeletal ,lcsh:Science ,Ceramide synthase ,Beta oxidation ,Sphingolipids ,Multidisciplinary ,Chemistry ,Fatty Acids ,Skeletal muscle ,Ceramide synthase 1 ,General Chemistry ,Lipid Metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Sphingolipid ,Mitochondria ,3. Good health ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,HEK293 Cells ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,Biochemistry ,lcsh:Q ,Insulin Resistance ,Oxidoreductases ,Oxidation-Reduction ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Specific forms of the lipid ceramide, synthesized by the ceramide synthase enzyme family, are believed to regulate metabolic physiology. Genetic mouse models have established C16 ceramide as a driver of insulin resistance in liver and adipose tissue. C18 ceramide, synthesized by ceramide synthase 1 (CerS1), is abundant in skeletal muscle and suggested to promote insulin resistance in humans. We herein describe the first isoform-specific ceramide synthase inhibitor, P053, which inhibits CerS1 with nanomolar potency. Lipidomic profiling shows that P053 is highly selective for CerS1. Daily P053 administration to mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD) increases fatty acid oxidation in skeletal muscle and impedes increases in muscle triglycerides and adiposity, but does not protect against HFD-induced insulin resistance. Our inhibitor therefore allowed us to define a role for CerS1 as an endogenous inhibitor of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation in muscle and regulator of whole-body adiposity., Ceramides are signalling molecules that regulate several physiological functions including insulin sensitivity. Here the authors report a selective ceramide synthase 1 inhibitor that counteracts lipid accumulation within the muscle and adiposity by increasing fatty acid oxidation but without affecting insulin sensitivity in mice fed with an obesogenic diet.
- Published
- 2018
24. Insulin controls food intake and energy balance via NPY neurons
- Author
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Lei Zhang, Herbert Herzog, Amanda E. Brandon, Qiao-Ping Wang, Denovan P. Begg, Jonathan D. Teo, Jens C. Brüning, Gregory J. Cooney, Kim Loh, Melissa Fu, Rishikesh N. Kulkarni, G. Gregory Neely, Yue Qi, and Paul A. Baldock
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,lcsh:Internal medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypothalamus ,NPY ,Brief Communication ,Energy homeostasis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Biological neural network ,Glucose homeostasis ,Insulin ,Obesity ,lcsh:RC31-1245 ,Molecular Biology ,biology ,Cell Biology ,Neuropeptide Y receptor ,Phenotype ,humanities ,Insulin receptor ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,biology.protein - Abstract
Objectives Insulin signaling in the brain has been implicated in the control of satiety, glucose homeostasis and energy balance. However, insulin signaling is dispensable in energy homeostasis controlling AgRP or POMC neurons and it is unclear which other neurons regulate these effects. Here we describe an ancient insulin/NPY neuronal network that governs energy homeostasis across phyla. Methods To address the role of insulin action specifically in NPY neurons, we generated a variety of models by selectively removing insulin signaling in NPY neurons in flies and mice and testing the consequences on energy homeostasis. Results By specifically targeting the insulin receptor in both fly and mouse NPY expressing neurons, we found NPY-specific insulin signaling controls food intake and energy expenditure, and lack of insulin signaling in NPY neurons leads to increased energy stores and an obese phenotype. Additionally, the lack of insulin signaling in NPY neurons leads to a dysregulation of GH/IGF-1 axis and to altered insulin sensitivity. Conclusions Taken together, these results suggest that insulin actions in NPY neurons is critical for maintaining energy balance and an impairment of this pathway may be causally linked to the development of metabolic diseases., Graphical abstract Image 1, Highlights • Insulin controls feeding via non-AgRP expressing NPY-neurons in flies and mice. • Energy expenditure is regulated by insulin responsive NPY neurons. • Insulin signaling in NPY neurons is required for maintaining whole body glucose homeostasis and insulin sensitivity. • Central insulin-NPY pathways regulate bone mass and growth development.
- Published
- 2017
25. Contributors
- Author
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Nicole Averet, Amita Bansal, Karima Begriche, Cyrielle Bouchez, Sihem Boudina, Amanda E. Brandon, Yan Burelle, Nadine Camougrand, Carles Cantó, Susana Cardoso, Audrey Carrière, François Casas, Louis Casteilla, Juliane K. Czeczor, Claudine David, Anne Devin, Maggie Diamond-Stanic, Stéphane Duvezin-Caubet, Bernard Fromenty, Xianlin Han, Graham P. Holloway, Hisayuki Katsuyama, Albert M. Kroon, Corinne Leloup, Stéphen Manon, Julie Massart, Keir J. Menzies, Paula M. Miotto, Thibaut Molinié, Paula I. Moreira, Béatrice Morio, Arnaud Mourier, Brenna Osborne, Julia Parnis, Luc Pénicaud, Cetewayo Rashid, Kimberly Reid, Michel Rigoulet, Michael Roden, Manuel Rojo, Guy A. Rutter, Raquel M. Seiça, Kumar Sharma, Yuguang Shi, Rebecca A. Simmons, Greg C. Smith, Jan-Willem Taanman, Nigel Turner, Goutham Vasam, and Edgar Djaha Yoboué
- Published
- 2019
26. Impact of Lifestyle and Clinical Interventions on Mitochondrial Function in Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes
- Author
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Nigel Turner, Brenna Osborne, Amanda E. Brandon, and Greg C. Smith
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Intervention (counseling) ,First line ,Lifestyle intervention ,Psychological intervention ,Medicine ,Type 2 diabetes ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,medicine.disease ,Obesity - Abstract
Lifestyle interventions are the first line of defense employed by many clinicians to both treat and prevent metabolic disorders associated with obesity, such as type 2 diabetes. Other clinical interventions, such as surgery, also are being rapidly implemented for these groups of patients. There is growing evidence that the benefit of these lifestyle and surgical treatments for patients might be driven by effects on mitochondrial function. This chapter will discuss the current knowledge about the influence of lifestyle and clinical interventions on mitochondrial health. The effects of lifestyle interventions such as dietary intervention, exercise, and physical training regimes, cessation of smoking, and cessation of alcohol will be discussed. Highly effective nonpharmacological clinical interventions, such as bariatric surgery and its effects on mitochondrial health, will also be reviewed.
- Published
- 2019
27. Treatment of type 2 diabetes with the designer cytokine IC7Fc
- Author
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Michael J Kraakman, Christoph Garbers, Tamara L Allen, Darren C. Henstridge, Mark A. Febbraio, Helene L. Kammoun, Lena Cron, Amanda E. Brandon, Casey L. Egan, Emma Estevez, James Sligar, Paul A. Baldock, Clinton R. Bruce, Guy Y. Krippner, Trevor J. Biden, Damien J. Keating, Emily W. Sun, Gregory J. Cooney, Martin Pal, Stefan Rose-John, Timothy E. Adams, Peter J. Meikle, Richard L. Young, Natalie A. Mellet, Greg M. Kowalski, Joachim Grötzinger, Michael A. Cowley, Laurie L. Baggio, Steve Risis, Liam O’Reilly, Robert S. Lee, Kevin I. Watt, Paul Gregorevic, Erica Kimber, Maria Findeisen, Christine Yang, Le May Thai, and Daniel J. Drucker
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Type 2 diabetes ,Protein Engineering ,Weight Gain ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cytokine Receptor gp130 ,Glucose tolerance test ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Muscle atrophy ,Cytokine ,Cytokines ,medicine.symptom ,Signal Transduction ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Inflammation ,Binding, Competitive ,Incretins ,03 medical and health sciences ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Obesity ,Interleukin 6 ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Pancreas ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,business.industry ,Interleukin-6 ,YAP-Signaling Proteins ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,medicine.disease ,Glycoprotein 130 ,Phosphoproteins ,Receptors, Interleukin-6 ,Fatty Liver ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Drug Design ,Hyperglycemia ,Immunoglobulin G ,biology.protein ,business ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
The gp130 receptor cytokines IL-6 and CNTF improve metabolic homeostasis but have limited therapeutic use for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Accordingly, we engineered the gp130 ligand IC7Fc, in which one gp130-binding site is removed from IL-6 and replaced with the LIF-receptor-binding site from CNTF, fused with the Fc domain of immunoglobulin G, creating a cytokine with CNTF-like, but IL-6-receptor-dependent, signalling. Here we show that IC7Fc improves glucose tolerance and hyperglycaemia and prevents weight gain and liver steatosis in mice. In addition, IC7Fc either increases, or prevents the loss of, skeletal muscle mass by activation of the transcriptional regulator YAP1. In human-cell-based assays, and in non-human primates, IC7Fc treatment results in no signs of inflammation or immunogenicity. Thus, IC7Fc is a realistic next-generation biological agent for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and muscle atrophy, disorders that are currently pandemic.
- Published
- 2018
28. Acute activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase increases glucose oxidation in muscle without changing glucose uptake
- Author
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Lewin Small, James R. Krycer, Lake-Ee Quek, Nigel Turner, David E. James, Amanda E. Brandon, and Gregory J. Cooney
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase ,Physiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Glucose uptake ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex ,Diet, High-Fat ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Insulin resistance ,Acetyl Coenzyme A ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,Rats, Wistar ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Pyruvates ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Glycogen ,Fatty Acids ,Fatty acid ,Metabolism ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex ,medicine.disease ,Randle cycle ,Rats ,Enzyme Activation ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
Pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity is a key component of the glucose/fatty acid cycle hypothesis for the regulation of glucose uptake and metabolism. We have investigated whether acute activation of PDH in muscle can alleviate the insulin resistance caused by feeding animals a high-fat diet (HFD). The importance of PDH activity in muscle glucose disposal under insulin-stimulated conditions was determined by infusing the PDH kinase inhibitor dichloroacetate (DCA) into HFD-fed Wistar rats during a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp. Acute DCA infusion did not alter glucose infusion rate, glucose disappearance, or hepatic glucose production but did decrease plasma lactate levels. DCA substantially increased muscle PDH activity; however, this did not improve insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in insulin-resistant muscle of HFD rats. DCA infusion increased the flux of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA and reduced glucose incorporation into glycogen and alanine in muscle. Similarly, in isolated muscle, DCA treatment increased glucose oxidation and decreased glycogen synthesis without changing glucose uptake. These results suggest that, although PDH activity controls the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA for oxidation, this has little effect on glucose uptake into muscle under insulin-stimulated conditions.
- Published
- 2018
29. Fructose bisphosphatase 2 overexpression increases glucose uptake in skeletal muscle
- Author
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Lewin Small, Eurwin Suryana, Lake-Ee Quek, Gregory J. Cooney, Nigel Turner, Amanda E. Brandon, and Ishita Bakshi
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Glucose uptake ,Fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Diet, High-Fat ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Glycolysis ,Rats, Wistar ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Glycogen ,biology ,Futile cycle ,Fructosephosphates ,Gluconeogenesis ,Skeletal muscle ,medicine.disease ,Fructose-Bisphosphatase ,Rats ,Up-Regulation ,Isoenzymes ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Glucose ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Insulin Resistance ,Rats, Transgenic - Abstract
Skeletal muscle is a major tissue for glucose metabolism and can store glucose as glycogen, convert glucose to lactate via glycolysis and fully oxidise glucose to CO2. Muscle has a limited capacity for gluconeogenesis but can convert lactate and alanine to glycogen. Gluconeogenesis requires FBP2, a muscle-specific form of fructose bisphosphatase that converts fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (F-1,6-bisP) to fructose-6-phosphate (F-6-P) opposing the activity of the ATP-consuming enzyme phosphofructokinase (PFK). In mammalian muscle, the activity of PFK is normally 100 times higher than FBP2 and therefore energy wasting cycling between PFK and FBP2 is low. In an attempt to increase substrate cycling between F-6-P and F-1,6-bisP and alter glucose metabolism, we overexpressed FBP2 using a muscle-specific adeno-associated virus (AAV-tMCK-FBP2). AAV was injected into the right tibialis muscle of rats, while the control contralateral left tibialis received a saline injection. Rats were fed a chow or 45% fat diet (HFD) for 5 weeks after which, hyperinsulinaemic-euglycaemic clamps were performed. Infection of the right tibialis with AAV-tMCK-FBP2 increased FBP2 activity 10 fold on average in chow and HFD rats (P
- Published
- 2018
30. Modeling insulin resistance in rodents by alterations in diet: what have high-fat and high-calorie diets revealed?
- Author
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Lewin Small, Nigel Turner, Gregory J. Cooney, and Amanda E. Brandon
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Calorie diets ,Rodentia ,Biology ,Diet, High-Fat ,03 medical and health sciences ,Insulin resistance ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,High fat ,Dietary Carbohydrates ,Animals ,Humans ,Insulin ,Diet composition ,medicine.disease ,Dietary Fats ,Diet ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Insulin Resistance ,Whole body ,Energy Intake - Abstract
For over half a century, researchers have been feeding different diets to rodents to examine the effects of macronutrients on whole body and tissue insulin action. During this period, the number of different diets and the source of macronutrients employed have grown dramatically. Because of the large heterogeneity in both the source and percentage of different macronutrients used for studies, it is not surprising that different high-calorie diets do not produce the same changes in insulin action. Despite this, diverse high-calorie diets continue to be employed in an attempt to generate a “generic” insulin resistance. The high-fat diet in particular varies greatly between studies with regard to the source, complexity, and ratio of dietary fat, carbohydrate, and protein. This review examines the range of rodent dietary models and methods for assessing insulin action. In almost all studies reviewed, rodents fed diets that had more than 45% of dietary energy as fat or simple carbohydrates had reduced whole body insulin action compared with chow. However, different high-calorie diets produced significantly different effects in liver, muscle, and whole body insulin action when insulin action was measured by the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp method. Rodent dietary models remain an important tool for exploring potential mechanisms of insulin resistance, but more attention needs to be given to the total macronutrient content and composition when interpreting dietary effects on insulin action.
- Published
- 2017
31. Ablation of Grb10 Specifically in Muscle Impacts Muscle Size and Glucose Metabolism in Mice
- Author
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Chantal A. Coles, Elaine Preston, Roger J. Daly, Lewin Small, Eurwin Suryana, Donna Wilks, Nancy Mokbel, Gregory J. Cooney, Amanda E. Brandon, Lowenna J Holt, Jason D. White, and Nigel Turner
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Glucose uptake ,medicine.medical_treatment ,GRB10 Adaptor Protein ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Muscle hypertrophy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Endocrinology ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Glucose homeostasis ,Animals ,Homeostasis ,Insulin ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Crosses, Genetic ,Mice, Knockout ,biology ,Integrases ,Chemistry ,Glucose clamp technique ,medicine.disease ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Insulin receptor ,030104 developmental biology ,Glucose ,biology.protein ,Glucose Clamp Technique ,Female ,Gene Deletion - Abstract
Grb10 is an adaptor-type signaling protein most highly expressed in tissues involved in insulin action and glucose metabolism, such as muscle, pancreas, and adipose. Germline deletion of Grb10 in mice creates a phenotype with larger muscles and improved glucose homeostasis. However, it has not been determined whether Grb10 ablation specifically in muscle is sufficient to induce hypermuscularity or affect whole body glucose metabolism. In this study we generated muscle-specific Grb10-deficient mice (Grb10-mKO) by crossing Grb10flox/flox mice with mice expressing Cre recombinase under control of the human α-skeletal actin promoter. One-year-old Grb10-mKO mice had enlarged muscles, with greater cross-sectional area of fibers compared with wild-type (WT) mice. This degree of hypermuscularity did not affect whole body glucose homeostasis under basal conditions. However, hyperinsulinemic/euglycemic clamp studies revealed that Grb10-mKO mice had greater glucose uptake into muscles compared with WT mice. Insulin signaling was increased at the level of phospho-Akt in muscle of Grb10-mKO mice compared with WT mice, consistent with a role of Grb10 as a modulator of proximal insulin receptor signaling. We conclude that ablation of Grb10 in muscle is sufficient to affect muscle size and metabolism, supporting an important role for this protein in growth and metabolic pathways.
- Published
- 2017
32. Determining the metabolic impact of dietary carbohydrate composition in the setting of low, medium and high protein diets
- Author
-
Josephine M. Forbes, Belinda Yau, Amanda E. Brandon, David G. Le Couteur, Tim Dodgson, Yen Chin Koay, Devin Wahl, Jibran A Wali, Victoria C. Cogger, John F. O'Sullivan, Annabelle J. Milner, Stephen J. Simpson, Tamara Pulpitel, Gregory J. Cooney, Samantha M. Solon-Biet, Michell O'Sullivan, and Melkam A. Kebede
- Subjects
Nutrition and Dietetics ,Chemistry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,High protein ,Composition (visual arts) ,Food science ,Dietary carbohydrate - Published
- 2019
33. Protein Kinase C Epsilon Deletion in Adipose Tissue, but Not in Liver, Improves Glucose Tolerance
- Author
-
Bing M. Liao, Peter J. Meikle, Dale Hancock, Gregory J. Cooney, Erica Kimber, Trevor J. Biden, Saskia Reibe, Mark A. Febbraio, Katy Raddatz, Sophie A. McManus, Amanda E. Brandon, Benjamin L. Parker, Liam O’Reilly, Barbara Diakanastasis, A. Gabrielle van der Kraan, David E. James, Darren C. Henstridge, and Carsten Schmitz-Peiffer
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Adipose tissue ,Protein Kinase C-epsilon ,Diet, High-Fat ,Gene Knockout Techniques ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Insulin resistance ,Adipocyte ,Glucose Intolerance ,medicine ,Animals ,Insulin ,Glucose homeostasis ,Molecular Biology ,Protein kinase C ,Mice, Knockout ,biology ,Chemistry ,Cell Biology ,Lipid Metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Insulin receptor ,Glucose ,030104 developmental biology ,Adipose Tissue ,Liver ,biology.protein ,Phosphorylation ,Insulin Resistance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Protein kinase C epsilon (PKCɛ) activation in the liver is proposed to inhibit insulin action through phosphorylation of the insulin receptor. Here, however, we demonstrated that global, but not liver-specific, deletion of PKCɛ in mice protected against diet-induced glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. Furthermore, PKCɛ-dependent alterations in insulin receptor phosphorylation were not detected. Adipose-tissue-specific knockout mice did exhibit improved glucose tolerance, but phosphoproteomics revealed no PKCɛ-dependent effect on the activation of insulin signaling pathways. Altered phosphorylation of adipocyte proteins associated with cell junctions and endosomes was associated with changes in hepatic expression of several genes linked to glucose homeostasis and lipid metabolism. The primary effect of PKCɛ on glucose homeostasis is, therefore, not exerted directly in the liver as currently posited, and PKCɛ activation in this tissue should be interpreted with caution. However, PKCɛ activity in adipose tissue modulates glucose tolerance and is involved in crosstalk with the liver.
- Published
- 2019
34. Tubuloglomerular feedback responses in offspring of dexamethasone-treated ewes
- Author
-
Amanda E. Brandon, Russell D. Brown, Anita J. Turner, Karen J. Gibson, and A. Erik G. Persson
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Indazoles ,Physiology ,Offspring ,Kidney development ,Punctures ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Biology ,Kidney ,Kidney Function Tests ,Nitric Oxide ,Dexamethasone ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Maternal malnutrition ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Fetal programming ,Glucocorticoids ,Tubuloglomerular feedback ,Sheep ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,NG-Nitroarginine Methyl Ester ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Hypertension ,Female ,Developmental programming ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Via developmental programming, prenatal perturbations, such as exposure to glucocorticoids and maternal malnutrition alter kidney development and contribute to the development of hypertension. To examine the possibility that alterations in tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) contribute to the development of hypertension in offspring following maternal dexamethasone treatment (Dex) in early gestation, studies were conducted in fetal sheep and lambs. Pregnant ewes were infused with dexamethasone (0.48 mg/h) at 26–28 days gestation. No differences were observed in mean arterial pressure, glomerular filtration rate. or electrolyte excretion rates between the Dex and Untreated fetuses or lambs. Gestational exposure to Dex markedly enhanced TGF sensitivity, as the turning point in Dex-treated fetuses was significantly lower (12.9 ± 0.9 nl/min; P < 0.05) compared with Untreated fetuses (17.0 ± 1.0 nl/min). This resetting of TGF sensitivity persisted after birth ( P < 0.01). TGF reactivity did not differ between the groups in fetuses or lambs. In response to nitric oxide inhibition, TGF sensitivity increased (the turning point decreased) and reactivity increased in Untreated fetuses and lambs, but these effects were blunted in the Dex-treated fetuses and lambs. Our data suggest that an altered TGF response may be an underlying renal mechanism contributing to the development of hypertension in the Dex model of fetal programming. The lower tonic level of NO production in these dexamethasone-exposed offspring may contribute to the development of hypertension as adults.
- Published
- 2016
35. Minimal impact of age and housing temperature on the metabolic phenotype of Acc2-/- mice
- Author
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Ella Stuart, Simon J Leslie, Nigel Turner, Amanda E. Brandon, Gregory J. Cooney, Kyle L. Hoehn, Edward W. Kraegen, and David E. James
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Glucose uptake ,Adipose tissue ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Endocrinology ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Insulin ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Triglycerides ,Mice, Knockout ,Glucose tolerance test ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Glycogen ,Chemistry ,Body Weight ,Fatty Acids ,Temperature ,Skeletal muscle ,Glucose clamp technique ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,medicine.disease ,Housing, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Phenotype ,Body Composition ,Glucose Clamp Technique ,Energy Metabolism ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase - Abstract
An important regulator of fatty acid oxidation (FAO) is the allosteric inhibition of CPT-1 by malonyl-CoA produced by the enzyme acetyl-CoA carboxylase 2 (ACC2). Initial studies suggested that deletion of Acc2 (Acacb) increased fat oxidation and reduced adipose tissue mass but in an independently generated strain of Acc2 knockout mice we observed increased whole-body and skeletal muscle FAO and a compensatory increase in muscle glycogen stores without changes in glucose tolerance, energy expenditure or fat mass in young mice (12–16 weeks). The aim of the present study was to determine whether there was any effect of age or housing at thermoneutrality (29 °C; which reduces total energy expenditure) on the phenotype of Acc2 knockout mice. At 42–54 weeks of age, male WT and Acc2−/− mice had similar body weight, fat mass, muscle triglyceride content and glucose tolerance. Consistent with younger Acc2−/− mice, aged Acc2−/− mice showed increased whole-body FAO (24 h average respiratory exchange ratio=0.95±0.02 and 0.92±0.02 for WT and Acc2−/− mice respectively, PPAcc2−/− mice at 29 °C did not alter body composition, glucose tolerance or the effects of fat feeding compared with WT mice. These results confirm that manipulation of Acc2 may alter FAO in mice, but this has little impact on body composition or insulin action.
- Published
- 2015
36. The evolution of insulin resistance in muscle of the glucose infused rat
- Author
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Amanda E. Brandon, Andrew J. Hoy, Lauren E. Wright, Asish K. Saha, Bronwyn D. Hegarty, X. Julia Xu, Gregory J. Cooney, Tristan J. Iseli, Neil B. Ruderman, Edward W. Kraegen, and Nigel Turner
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Glucose uptake ,Biophysics ,AMP-Activated Protein Kinases ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Insulin resistance ,AMP-activated protein kinase ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Phosphorylation ,Rats, Wistar ,Molecular Biology ,Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 beta ,biology ,Glycogen ,Muscles ,GTPase-Activating Proteins ,Skeletal muscle ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Insulin oscillation ,Insulin receptor ,Glucose ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Insulin Resistance ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt - Abstract
Glucose infusion into rats causes skeletal muscle insulin resistance that initially occurs without changes in insulin signaling. The aim of the current study was to prolong glucose infusion and evaluate other events associated with the transition to muscle insulin resistance. Hyperglycemia was produced in rats by glucose infusion for 3, 5 and 8 h. The rate of infusion required to maintain hyperglycemia was reduced at 5 and 8 h. Glucose uptake into red quadriceps (RQ) and its incorporation into glycogen decreased between 3 and 5 h, further decreasing at 8 h. The earliest observed change in RQ was decreased AMPKα2 activity associated with large increases in muscle glycogen content at 3 h. Activation of the mTOR pathway occurred at 5 h. Akt phosphorylation (Ser(473)) was decreased at 8 h compared to 3 and 5, although no decrease in phosphorylation of downstream GSK-3β (Ser(9)) and AS160 (Thr(642)) was observed. White quadriceps showed a similar but delayed pattern, with insulin resistance developing by 8 h and decreased AMPKα2 activity at 5 h. These results indicate that, in the presence of a nutrient overload, alterations in muscle insulin signaling occur, but after insulin resistance develops and appropriate changes in energy/nutrient sensing pathways occur.
- Published
- 2011
37. Downregulation of AMPK Accompanies Leucine- and Glucose-Induced Increases in Protein Synthesis and Insulin Resistance in Rat Skeletal Muscle
- Author
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Neil B. Ruderman, Edward W. Kraegen, Ebony Lawson, Amanda E. Brandon, Asish K. Saha, Rosangela Deoliveira, and X. Julia Xu
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Down-Regulation ,AMP-Activated Protein Kinases ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Insulin resistance ,AMP-activated protein kinase ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Leucine ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Phosphorylation ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Pyruvates ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,biology ,TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Adenylate Kinase ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Ribosomal Protein S6 Kinases, 70-kDa ,Skeletal muscle ,AMPK ,Ribonucleotides ,Aminoimidazole Carboxamide ,Phosphoproteins ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Kinetics ,Insulin receptor ,Metabolism ,Glucose ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Lactates ,biology.protein ,Insulin Resistance ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Branched-chain amino acids, such as leucine and glucose, stimulate protein synthesis and increase the phosphorylation and activity of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and its downstream target p70S6 kinase (p70S6K). We examined in skeletal muscle whether the effects of leucine and glucose on these parameters and on insulin resistance are mediated by the fuel-sensing enzyme AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Rat extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle was incubated with different concentrations of leucine and glucose with or without AMPK activators. Muscle obtained from glucose-infused rats was also used as a model. RESULTS In the EDL, incubation with 100 or 200 μmol/l leucine versus no added leucine suppressed the activity of the α2 isoform of AMPK by 50 and 70%, respectively, and caused concentration-dependent increases in protein synthesis and mTOR and p70S6K phosphorylation. Very similar changes were observed in EDL incubated with 5.5 or 25 mmol/l versus no added glucose and in muscle of rats infused with glucose in vivo. Incubation of the EDL with the higher concentrations of both leucine and glucose also caused insulin resistance, reflected by a decrease in insulin-stimulated Akt phosphorylation. Coincubation with the AMPK activators AICAR and α-lipoic acid substantially prevented all of those changes and increased the phosphorylation of specific sites of mTOR inhibitors raptor and tuberous sclerosis complex 2 (TSC2). In contrast, decreases in AMPK activity induced by leucine and glucose were not associated with a decrease in raptor or TSC2 phosphorylation. CONCLUSIONS The results indicate that both leucine and glucose modulate protein synthesis and mTOR/p70S6 and insulin signaling in skeletal muscle by a common mechanism. They also suggest that the effects of both molecules are associated with a decrease in AMPK activity and that AMPK activation prevents them.
- Published
- 2010
38. Lipid and insulin infusion-induced skeletal muscle insulin resistance is likely due to metabolic feedback and not changes in IRS-1, Akt, or AS160 phosphorylation
- Author
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Edward W. Kraegen, Clinton R. Bruce, Nigel Turner, Gregory J. Cooney, Amanda E. Brandon, Matthew J. Watt, and Andrew J. Hoy
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Glucose uptake ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Insulin resistance ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Hyperinsulinemia ,Animals ,Insulin ,Phosphorylation ,Rats, Wistar ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Feedback, Physiological ,biology ,GTPase-Activating Proteins ,Skeletal muscle ,Articles ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,Rats ,Insulin oscillation ,Oncogene Protein v-akt ,Insulin receptor ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Lipotoxicity ,Insulin Receptor Substrate Proteins ,biology.protein ,Insulin Resistance ,Glycogen ,Metabolic Networks and Pathways - Abstract
Type 2 diabetes is characterized by hyperlipidemia, hyperinsulinemia, and insulin resistance. The aim of this study was to investigate whether acute hyperlipidemia-induced insulin resistance in the presence of hyperinsulinemia was due to defective insulin signaling. Hyperinsulinemia (∼300 mU/l) with hyperlipidemia or glycerol (control) was produced in cannulated male Wistar rats for 0.5, 1 h, 3 h, or 5 h. The glucose infusion rate required to maintain euglycemia was significantly reduced by 3 h with lipid infusion and was further reduced after 5 h of infusion, with no difference in plasma insulin levels, indicating development of insulin resistance. Consistent with this finding, in vivo skeletal muscle glucose uptake (31%, P < 0.05) and glycogen synthesis rate (38%, P < 0.02) were significantly reduced after 5 h compared with 3 h of lipid infusion. Despite the development of insulin resistance, there was no difference in the phosphorylation state of multiple insulin-signaling intermediates or muscle diacylglyceride and ceramide content over the same time course. However, there was an increase in cumulative exposure to long-chain acyl-CoA (70%) with lipid infusion. Interestingly, although muscle pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 protein content was decreased in hyperinsulinemic glycerol-infused rats, this decrease was blunted in muscle from hyperinsulinemic lipid-infused rats. Decreased pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity was also observed in lipid- and insulin-infused animals (43%). Overall, these results suggest that acute reductions in muscle glucose metabolism in rats with hyperlipidemia and hyperinsulinemia are more likely a result of substrate competition than a significant early defect in insulin action or signaling.
- Published
- 2009
39. Maternal renal dysfunction in sheep is associated with salt insensitivity in female offspring
- Author
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Eugenie R. Lumbers, Karen J. Gibson, Amanda E. Brandon, and Amanda C. Boyce
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Aldosterone ,Physiology ,Offspring ,Maternal effect ,Renal function ,Biology ,Plasma renin activity ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Blood pressure ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Renin–angiotensin system ,medicine ,Salt intake - Abstract
To examine the programming effects of maternal renal dysfunction (created by subtotal nephrectomy in ewes prior to mating; STNx), renal and cardiovascular function were studied in 6-month-old male and female offspring of STNx and control pregnancies. After studies were conducted on a low salt diet (LSD) some female offspring underwent salt loading (0.17 m NaCl in the drinking water for 5–7 days; HSD). On LSD both male and female offspring of STNx had similar mean arterial pressures (MAP), heart rates, cardiac outputs and renal function to those measured in offspring of control ewes. In female STNx offspring on a HSD, plasma sodium levels increased and haematocrits fell, indicating volume expansion (P < 0.05). Plasma renin levels were not suppressed despite the increases in plasma sodium concentrations, but aldosterone levels were reduced. In control animals plasma renin levels fell (P < 0.05) but there was no change in plasma aldosterone concentrations. There was a positive relationship between GFR and MAP which was present only in female STNx offspring. In conclusion, in STNx offspring there was an impaired ability to regulate glomerular filtration independent of arterial pressure, renin release was insensitive to a high salt intake and control of aldosterone secretion was abnormal. This study provides evidence of abnormal programming of the renin–angiotensin system and glomerular function in offspring of pregnancies in which there is impaired maternal renal function.
- Published
- 2009
40. The RabGAP TBC1D1 plays a central role in exercise-regulated glucose metabolism in skeletal muscle
- Author
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Mark E. Cleasby, Xiuquan Ma, Christopher C. Meoli, David E. James, Amanda E. Brandon, Jacqueline Stöckli, Daniel J. Fazakerley, Maximilian Kleinert, Jamie A. Lopez, Himani Pant, Nolan J. Hoffman, and Gregory J. Cooney
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Glucose uptake ,Stimulation ,Biology ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Mice ,Physical Conditioning, Animal ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Insulin ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Mice, Knockout ,Glucose Transporter Type 4 ,Body Weight ,GTPase-Activating Proteins ,Glucose transporter ,Nuclear Proteins ,Skeletal muscle ,TBC1D1 ,Electroporation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,biology.protein ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Glycogen ,GLUT4 - Abstract
Insulin and exercise stimulate glucose uptake into skeletal muscle via different pathways. Both stimuli converge on the translocation of the glucose transporter GLUT4 from intracellular vesicles to the cell surface. Two Rab guanosine triphosphatases-activating proteins (GAPs) have been implicated in this process: AS160 for insulin stimulation and its homolog, TBC1D1, are suggested to regulate exercise-mediated glucose uptake into muscle. TBC1D1 has also been implicated in obesity in humans and mice. We investigated the role of TBC1D1 in glucose metabolism by generating TBC1D1−/− mice and analyzing body weight, insulin action, and exercise. TBC1D1−/− mice showed normal glucose and insulin tolerance, with no difference in body weight compared with wild-type littermates. GLUT4 protein levels were reduced by ∼40% in white TBC1D1−/− muscle, and TBC1D1−/− mice showed impaired exercise endurance together with impaired exercise-mediated 2-deoxyglucose uptake into white but not red muscles. These findings indicate that the RabGAP TBC1D1 plays a key role in regulating GLUT4 protein levels and in exercise-mediated glucose uptake in nonoxidative muscle fibers.
- Published
- 2015
41. Corrigendum to 'Insulin controls food intake and energy balance via NPY neurons' [Mol Metabol 6 (2017) 574–584]
- Author
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Jonathan D. Teo, Melissa Fu, Qiao-Ping Wang, Jens C. Brüning, Amanda E. Brandon, Gregory J. Cooney, Yue Qi, Kim Loh, Denovan P. Begg, Rishikesh N. Kulkarni, Lei Zhang, Herbert Herzog, Paul A. Baldock, and G. Gregory Neely
- Subjects
Male ,lcsh:Internal medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Food intake ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Energy balance ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Eating ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Mole ,medicine ,Animals ,Insulin ,Neuropeptide Y ,lcsh:RC31-1245 ,Molecular Biology ,Neurons ,business.industry ,Brain ,Cell Biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Endocrinology ,Drosophila ,Corrigendum ,Energy Metabolism ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Insulin signaling in the brain has been implicated in the control of satiety, glucose homeostasis and energy balance. However, insulin signaling is dispensable in energy homeostasis controlling AgRP or POMC neurons and it is unclear which other neurons regulate these effects. Here we describe an ancient insulin/NPY neuronal network that governs energy homeostasis across phyla.To address the role of insulin action specifically in NPY neurons, we generated a variety of models by selectively removing insulin signaling in NPY neurons in flies and mice and testing the consequences on energy homeostasis.By specifically targeting the insulin receptor in both fly and mouse NPY expressing neurons, we found NPY-specific insulin signaling controls food intake and energy expenditure, and lack of insulin signaling in NPY neurons leads to increased energy stores and an obese phenotype. Additionally, the lack of insulin signaling in NPY neurons leads to a dysregulation of GH/IGF-1 axis and to altered insulin sensitivity.Taken together, these results suggest that insulin actions in NPY neurons is critical for maintaining energy balance and an impairment of this pathway may be causally linked to the development of metabolic diseases.
- Published
- 2017
42. Correction: Insulin and diet-induced changes in the ubiquitin-modified proteome of rat liver
- Author
-
Jessie McKenna, Harrison C. Shtein, Andrew J. Hoy, Amanda E. Brandon, Philip Poronnik, Darren N. Saunders, Shilpa R. Nagarajan, Thinh Q. Nguyen, Eurwin Suryana, and Gregory J. Cooney
- Subjects
Male ,Sucrose ,Proteome ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Citric Acid Cycle ,lcsh:Medicine ,Text mining ,Ubiquitin ,medicine ,Animals ,Insulin ,Rats, Wistar ,lcsh:Science ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Fatty Acids ,lcsh:R ,Gluconeogenesis ,Correction ,Lipid Metabolism ,Dietary Fats ,Carbon ,Diet ,Rats ,Liver ,Biochemistry ,Rat liver ,biology.protein ,lcsh:Q ,Insulin Resistance ,business ,Glycolysis ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,Metabolic Networks and Pathways - Abstract
Ubiquitin is a crucial post-translational modification regulating numerous cellular processes, but its role in metabolic disease is not well characterized. In this study, we identified the in vivo ubiquitin-modified proteome in rat liver and determined changes in this ubiquitome under acute insulin stimulation and high-fat and sucrose diet-induced insulin resistance. We identified 1267 ubiquitinated proteins in rat liver across diet and insulin-stimulated conditions, with 882 proteins common to all conditions. KEGG pathway analysis of these proteins identified enrichment of metabolic pathways, TCA cycle, glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, fatty acid metabolism, and carbon metabolism, with similar pathways altered by diet and insulin resistance. Thus, the rat liver ubiquitome is sensitive to diet and insulin stimulation and this is perturbed in insulin resistance.
- Published
- 2017
43. Insulin and diet-induced changes in the ubiquitin-modified proteome of rat liver
- Author
-
Amanda E. Brandon, Andrew J. Hoy, Gregory J. Cooney, Shilpa R. Nagarajan, Jessie McKenna, Harrison C. Shtein, Philip Poronnik, Darren N. Saunders, Eurwin Suryana, and Thinh Q. Nguyen
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Protein metabolism ,lcsh:Medicine ,Gastroenterology and Hepatology ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Insulin resistance ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,medicine ,Insulin ,Glycolysis ,Post-Translational Modification ,lcsh:Science ,Nutrition ,Protein Metabolism ,Diabetic Endocrinology ,2. Zero hunger ,Multidisciplinary ,Endocrine Physiology ,Fatty acid metabolism ,Liver Diseases ,Fatty Acids ,lcsh:R ,Fatty liver ,Ubiquitination ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,Hormones ,Diet ,Fatty Liver ,Metabolic pathway ,Metabolism ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Proteome ,lcsh:Q ,Metabolic Pathways ,Insulin Resistance ,Research Article - Abstract
Ubiquitin is a crucial post-translational modification regulating numerous cellular processes, but its role in metabolic disease is not well characterized. In this study, we identified the in vivo ubiquitin-modified proteome in rat liver and determined changes in this ubiquitome under acute insulin stimulation and high-fat and sucrose diet-induced insulin resistance. We identified 1267 ubiquitinated proteins in rat liver across diet and insulin-stimulated conditions, with 882 proteins common to all conditions. KEGG pathway analysis of these proteins identified enrichment of metabolic pathways, TCA cycle, glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, fatty acid metabolism, and carbon metabolism, with similar pathways altered by diet and insulin resistance. Thus, the rat liver ubiquitome is sensitive to diet and insulin stimulation and this is perturbed in insulin resistance.
- Published
- 2017
44. Subcutaneous fat transplantation alleviates diet-induced glucose intolerance and inflammation in mice
- Author
-
Jagath Reddy Junutula, Eurwin Suryana, Ella Stuart, Amanda E. Brandon, Rebecca L. Stewart, David E. James, Emily M. Baldwin, Michael Medynskyj, Jenny E. Gunton, Ganesh Kolumam, Michael M. Swarbrick, Elisabeth Karsten, Sinead P. Blaber, Gregory J. Cooney, Zora Modrusan, Benjamin R. Herbert, and Samantha L. Hocking
- Subjects
Leptin ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intra-Abdominal Fat ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Glucose uptake ,Subcutaneous Fat ,Adipose tissue ,Adipokine ,Diet, High-Fat ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Eating ,Mice ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,Glucose Intolerance ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Adipocytes ,Animals ,Insulin ,Triglycerides ,Adiposity ,Inflammation ,Adiponectin ,business.industry ,Gluconeogenesis ,medicine.disease ,Transplantation ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Endocrinology ,Glucose ,Liver ,Body Composition ,Cytokines ,business - Abstract
Adipose tissue (AT) distribution is a major determinant of mortality and morbidity in obesity. In mice, intra-abdominal transplantation of subcutaneous AT (SAT) protects against glucose intolerance and insulin resistance (IR), but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood.We investigated changes in adipokines, tissue-specific glucose uptake, gene expression and systemic inflammation in male C57BL6/J mice implanted intra-abdominally with either inguinal SAT or epididymal visceral AT (VAT) and fed a high-fat diet (HFD) for up to 17 weeks.Glucose tolerance was improved in mice receiving SAT after 6 weeks, and this was not attributable to differences in adiposity, tissue-specific glucose uptake, or plasma leptin or adiponectin concentrations. Instead, SAT transplantation prevented HFD-induced hepatic triacylglycerol accumulation and normalised the expression of hepatic gluconeogenic enzymes. Grafted fat displayed a significant increase in glucose uptake and unexpectedly, an induction of skeletal muscle-specific gene expression. Mice receiving subcutaneous fat also displayed a marked reduction in the plasma concentrations of several proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-17, IL-12p70, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 [MCP-1] and macrophage inflammatory protein-1β [ΜIP-1β]), compared with sham-operated mice. Plasma IL-17 and MIP-1β concentrations were reduced from as early as 4 weeks after transplantation, and differences in plasma TNF-α and IL-17 concentrations predicted glucose tolerance and insulinaemia in the entire cohort of mice (n = 40). In contrast, mice receiving visceral fat transplants were glucose intolerant, with increased hepatic triacylglycerol content and elevated plasma IL-6 concentrations.Intra-abdominal transplantation of subcutaneous fat reverses HFD-induced glucose intolerance, hepatic triacylglycerol accumulation and systemic inflammation in mice.
- Published
- 2014
45. Subcutaneous fat transplantation alleviates diet-induced glucose intolerance and inflammation in mice
- Author
-
Rebecca L. Stewart, Benjamin R. Herbert, Eurwin Suryana, Samantha L. Hocking, Sinead P. Blaber, Ganesh Kolumam, Amanda E. Brandon, Michael Medynskyj, Elisabeth Karsten, Gregory J. Cooney, Emily M. Baldwin, and Michael M. Swarbrick
- Subjects
Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Endocrinology ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Inflammation ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Subcutaneous fat - Published
- 2014
46. Overexpression of manganese superoxide dismutase ameliorates high-fat diet-induced insulin resistance in rat skeletal muscle
- Author
-
Ella Stuart, Jennifer Tid-Ang, Elaine Preston, Mark E. Cleasby, Michael J. Boden, Nigel Turner, Donna Wilks, Edward W. Kraegen, Amanda E. Brandon, and Gregory J. Cooney
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Muscle Fibers, Skeletal ,Mitochondrion ,medicine.disease_cause ,Diet, High-Fat ,Superoxide dismutase ,Protein Carbonylation ,Insulin resistance ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Rats, Wistar ,Muscle, Skeletal ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Reactive oxygen species ,Glutathione Peroxidase ,biology ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Glutathione peroxidase ,Gene Transfer Techniques ,Skeletal muscle ,Articles ,medicine.disease ,Mitochondria, Muscle ,Rats ,Up-Regulation ,Oxidative Stress ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Electroporation ,chemistry ,Lower Extremity ,biology.protein ,Insulin Resistance ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
Elevated mitochondrial reactive oxygen species have been suggested to play a causative role in some forms of muscle insulin resistance. However, the extent of their involvement in the development of diet-induced insulin resistance remains unclear. To investigate, manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), a key mitochondrial-specific enzyme with antioxidant modality, was overexpressed, and the effect on in vivo muscle insulin resistance induced by a high-fat (HF) diet in rats was evaluated. Male Wistar rats were maintained on chow or HF diet. After 3 wk, in vivo electroporation (IVE) of MnSOD expression and empty vectors was undertaken in right and left tibialis cranialis (TC) muscles, respectively. After one more week, insulin action was evaluated using hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp, and tissues were subsequently analyzed for antioxidant enzyme capacity and markers of oxidative stress. MnSOD mRNA was overexpressed 4.5-fold, and protein levels were increased by 70%, with protein detected primarily in the mitochondrial fraction of muscle fibers. This was associated with elevated MnSOD and glutathione peroxidase activity, indicating that the overexpressed MnSOD was functionally active. The HF diet significantly reduced whole body and TC muscle insulin action, whereas overexpression of MnSOD in HF diet animals ameliorated this reduction in TC muscle glucose uptake by 50% ( P < 0.05). Decreased protein carbonylation was seen in MnSOD overexpressing TC muscle in HF-treated animals (20% vs. contralateral control leg, P < 0.05), suggesting that this effect was mediated through an altered redox state. Thus interventions causing elevation of mitochondrial antioxidant activity may offer protection against diet-induced insulin resistance in skeletal muscle.
- Published
- 2012
47. Insulin resistance due to nutrient excess: Is it a consequence of AMPK downregulation?
- Author
-
Asish K. Saha, Thomas W. Balon, Amanda E. Brandon, X. Julia Xu, Neil B. Ruderman, and Edward W. Kraegen
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,AMP-Activated Protein Kinases ,Models, Biological ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,Mice ,Insulin resistance ,AMP-activated protein kinase ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Protein kinase A ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Molecular Biology ,PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway ,biology ,Extra View ,RPTOR ,AMPK ,Ribosomal Protein S6 Kinases, 70-kDa ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Glucose ,biology.protein ,Phosphorylation ,Insulin Resistance ,Amino Acids, Branched-Chain ,Developmental Biology ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
It has long been known that excesses of glucose and branched chain amino acids, such as leucine, lead to insulin resistance in skeletal muscle. A recent study in incubated rat muscle suggests that both molecules may do so by virtue of their ability to downregulate the fuel sensing and signaling enzyme AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and activate mTOR/p70S6 kinase (p70S6K) signaling. The results also demonstrated that inhibition of mTOR/p70S6K with rapamycin prevented the development of insulin resistance but had no effect on AMPK activity (Thr172 phosphorylation of its catalytic subunit). In contrast, activation of AMPK by both AICAR and α-lipoic acid led to the phosphorylation of specific molecules that diminished both mTOR/p70S6K signaling and insulin resistance. These findings suggest that downregulation of AMPK precedes mTOR/p70S6K activation in mediating glucose and leucine-induced insulin resistance, although the mechanism by which it does so remains to be determined. Also requiring study is how an excess of the two nutrients leads to AMPK downregulation.
- Published
- 2011
48. Amelioration of lipid-induced insulin resistance in rat skeletal muscle by overexpression of Pgc-1β involves reductions in long-chain acyl-CoA levels and oxidative stress
- Author
-
Jan Oscarsson, Lauren E. Wright, Christopher J. Lelliott, Gregory J. Cooney, Gun-Britt Forsberg, Andrew J. Hoy, Nigel Turner, L. Löfgren, Jane Reznick, Amanda E. Brandon, and M. Strömstedt
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,Coactivator ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Insulin ,Skeletal muscle ,RNA-Binding Proteins ,Lipid metabolism ,Peroxisome ,medicine.disease ,Lipid Metabolism ,Dietary Fats ,Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Gamma Coactivator 1-alpha ,Mitochondria, Muscle ,Rats ,Oxidative Stress ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Models, Animal ,Acyl Coenzyme A ,PPARGC1B ,Insulin Resistance ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Oxidative stress ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
To determine if acute overexpression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor, gamma, coactivator 1 beta (Pgc-1β [also known as Ppargc1b]) in skeletal muscle improves insulin action in a rodent model of diet-induced insulin resistance.Rats were fed either a low-fat or high-fat diet (HFD) for 4 weeks. In vivo electroporation was used to overexpress Pgc-1β in the tibialis cranialis (TC) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles. Downstream effects of Pgc-1β on markers of mitochondrial oxidative capacity, oxidative stress and muscle lipid levels were characterised. Insulin action was examined ex vivo using intact muscle strips and in vivo via a hyperinsulinaemic-euglycaemic clamp.Pgc-1β gene expression was increased100% over basal levels. The levels of proteins involved in mitochondrial function, lipid metabolism and antioxidant defences, the activity of oxidative enzymes, and substrate oxidative capacity were all increased in muscles overexpressing Pgc-1β. In rats fed a HFD, increasing the levels of Pgc-1β partially ameliorated muscle insulin resistance, in association with decreased levels of long-chain acyl-CoAs (LCACoAs) and increased antioxidant defences.Our data show that an increase in Pgc-1β expression in vivo activates a coordinated subset of genes that increase mitochondrial substrate oxidation, defend against oxidative stress and improve lipid-induced insulin resistance in skeletal muscle.
- Published
- 2010
49. Overexpression of SIRT1 in Rat Skeletal Muscle Does Not Alter Glucose Induced Insulin Resistance
- Author
-
Amanda E. Brandon, Nicholas L. Bentley, Gregory J. Cooney, Ella Stuart, Eurwin Suryana, Lauren E. Wright, Nigel Turner, Neil B. Ruderman, Edward W. Kraegen, and Jennifer Tid-Ang
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system diseases ,Glucose uptake ,lcsh:Medicine ,environment and public health ,Cell Line ,Mice ,Insulin resistance ,Sirtuin 1 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,lcsh:Science ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Glycogen synthase ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,lcsh:R ,Skeletal muscle ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,Electroporation ,Glucose ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Cell culture ,Hyperglycemia ,biology.protein ,lcsh:Q ,NAD+ kinase ,Insulin Resistance ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Signal transduction ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Research Article ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
SIRT1 is a NAD+-dependent deacetylase thought to regulate cellular metabolic pathways in response to alterations in nutrient flux. In the current study we investigated whether acute changes in SIRT1 expression affect markers of muscle mitochondrial content and also determined whether SIRT1 influenced muscle insulin resistance induced by acute glucose oversupply. In male Wistar rats either SIRT1 or a deacetylase inactive mutant form (H363Y) was electroprated into the tibialis cranialis (TC) muscle. The other leg was electroporated with an empty control vector. One week later, glucose was infused and hyperglycaemia was maintained at ~11mM. After 5 hours, 11mM glucose induced significant insulin resistance in skeletal muscle. Interestingly, overexpression of either SIRT1 or SIRT1 (H363Y) for 1 week did not change markers of mitochondrial content or function. SIRT1 or SIRT1 (H363Y) overexpression had no effect on the reduction in glucose uptake and glycogen synthesis in muscle in response to hyperglycemia. Therefore we conclude that acute increases in SIRT1 protein have little impact on mitochondrial content and that overexpressing SIRT1 does not prevent the development of insulin resistance during hyperglycaemia.
- Published
- 2015
50. Insulin sensitivity is preserved in mice made obese by feeding a high starch diet
- Author
-
Amanda E Brandon, Lewin Small, Tuong-Vi Nguyen, Eurwin Suryana, Henry Gong, Christian Yassmin, Sarah E Hancock, Tamara Pulpitel, Sophie Stonehouse, Letisha Prescott, Melkam A Kebede, Belinda Yau, Lake-Ee Quek, Greg M Kowalski, Clinton R Bruce, Nigel Turner, and Gregory J Cooney
- Subjects
obesity ,insulin sensitivity ,ceramide ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Obesity is generally associated with insulin resistance in liver and muscle and increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes, however there is a population of obese people that remain insulin sensitive. Similarly, recent work suggests that mice fed high carbohydrate diets can become obese without apparent glucose intolerance. To investigate this phenomenon further, we fed mice either a high fat (Hi-F) or high starch (Hi-ST) diet and measured adiposity, glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and tissue lipids compared to control mice fed a standard laboratory chow. Both Hi-ST and Hi-F mice accumulated a similar amount of fat and tissue triglyceride compared to chow-fed mice. However, while Hi-F diet mice developed glucose intolerance as well as liver and muscle insulin resistance (assessed via euglycaemic/hyperinsulinaemic clamp), obese Hi-ST mice maintained glucose tolerance and insulin action similar to lean, chow-fed controls. This preservation of insulin action despite obesity in Hi-ST mice was associated with differences in de novo lipogenesis and levels of C22:0 ceramide in liver and C18:0 ceramide in muscle. This indicates that dietary manipulation can influence insulin action independently of the level of adiposity and that the presence of specific ceramide species correlates with these differences.
- Published
- 2022
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