1. Serum osteocalcin is associated with improved metabolic state via adiponectin in females versus testosterone in males. Gender specific nature of the bone-energy homeostasis axis.
- Author
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Buday B, Pach FP, Literati-Nagy B, Vitai M, Vecsei Z, and Koranyi L
- Subjects
- Adiponectin metabolism, Adult, Female, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Male, Middle Aged, Osteocalcin metabolism, Testosterone metabolism, Adiponectin blood, Osteocalcin blood, Testosterone blood
- Abstract
Objective: The osteoblast-derived protein osteocalcin (OCN) is known to be involved in glucose metabolism by increasing adiponectin secretion from adipocytes. Recently, OCN was also found to enhance testosterone production in mouse testes, suggesting that OCN effects on energy metabolism may be mediated through testosterone. Our aim was to assess a possible gender difference in the metabolic effect of OCN in humans., Methods: We included 135 women and 155 men exhibiting changes in glucose tolerance in our study. Oral and intravenous glucose tolerance tests (OGTT and IVGTT, respectively) and a hyperinsulinemic normoglycemic clamp were performed. For clamp indices, whole body (M1) and muscle (M2) glucose uptake values were used. Leptin, adiponectin serum lipid, lipoprotein, total serum OCN and testosterone levels, and body composition were determined., Results: Higher OCN values were associated with improving metabolic state in both genders. Adiponectin and OCN correlated significantly only in females (r=+0.254, p=0.0029), while in men, testosterone and OCN values showed a significant positive correlation (r=+0.243, p=0.0023), independent of age, BMI, HbA1c and body composition. In women, adiponectin was confirmed by feature selection analysis as being an independent determinant of OCN, in addition to age and three of the IVGTT glucose values. In men, besides M1, BMI, M2, leptin, body fat percent, and the 90-minute OGTT glucose reading testosterone, but not adiponectin were identified as independent contributors for OCN., Conclusion: We confirmed the 'classic' adiponectin-mediated insulin-sensitising effect of OCN only in females. In men, a testosterone-mediated OCN metabolic effect is more likely., (© 2013.)
- Published
- 2013
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