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Stimulation of the hepatoportal nerve plexus with focused ultrasound restores glucose homoeostasis in diabetic mice, rats and swine

Authors :
Victoria Cotero
John Graf
Hiromi Miwa
Zall Hirschstein
Khaled Qanud
Tomás S. Huerta
Ningwen Tai
Yuyan Ding
Kevin Jimenez-Cowell
Jacquelyn N. Tomaio
Weiguo Song
Alex Devarajan
Tea Tsaava
Radhika Madhavan
Kirk Wallace
Evelina Loghin
Christine Morton
Ying Fan
Tzu-Jen Kao
Kainat Akhtar
Meghana Damaraju
Linda Barenboim
Teresa Maietta
Jeffrey Ashe
Kevin J. Tracey
Thomas R. Coleman
Dino Di Carlo
Damian Shin
Stavros Zanos
Sangeeta S. Chavan
Raimund I. Herzog
Chris Puleo
Source :
Nature biomedical engineering, vol 6, iss 6, Nat Biomed Eng
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2022.

Abstract

Peripheral neurons that sense glucose relay signals of glucose availability to integrative clusters of neurons in the brain. However, the roles of such signalling pathways in the maintenance of glucose homoeostasis and their contribution to disease are unknown. Here we show that the selective activation of the nerve plexus of the hepatic portal system via peripheral focused ultrasound stimulation (pFUS) improves glucose homoeostasis in mice and rats with insulin-resistant diabetes and in swine subject to hyperinsulinemic-euglycaemic clamps. pFUS modulated the activity of sensory projections to the hypothalamus, altered the concentrations of metabolism-regulating neurotransmitters, and enhanced glucose tolerance and utilization in the three species, whereas physical transection or chemical blocking of the liver–brain nerve pathway abolished the effect of pFUS on glucose tolerance. Longitudinal multi-omic profiling of metabolic tissues from the treated animals confirmed pFUS-induced modifications of key metabolic functions in liver, pancreas, muscle, adipose, kidney and intestinal tissues. Non-invasive ultrasound activation of afferent autonomic nerves may represent a non-pharmacologic therapy for the restoration of glucose homoeostasis in type-2 diabetes and other metabolic diseases.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature biomedical engineering, vol 6, iss 6, Nat Biomed Eng
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f0a8488343d3d4ec60241759abde0f4