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Protein Ingestion Induces Muscle Insulin Resistance Independent of Leucine-Mediated mTOR Activation

Authors :
Gordon I. Smith
Dominic N. Reeds
Samuel Klein
Jun Yoshino
Kelly L Stromsdorfer
Seth J. Klein
Faidon Magkos
Bettina Mittendorfer
Source :
Diabetes
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Diabetes Association, 2014.

Abstract

Increased plasma branched-chain amino acid concentrations are associated with insulin resistance, and intravenous amino acid infusion blunts insulin-mediated glucose disposal. We tested the hypothesis that protein ingestion impairs insulin-mediated glucose disposal by leucine-mediated mTOR signaling, which can inhibit AKT. We measured glucose disposal and muscle p-mTORSer2448, p-AKTSer473, and p-AKTThr308 in 22 women during a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp procedure with and without concomitant ingestion of whey protein (0.6 g/kg fat-free mass; n = 11) or leucine that matched the amount given with whey protein (n = 11). Both whey protein and leucine ingestion raised plasma leucine concentration by approximately twofold and muscle p-mTORSer2448 by ∼30% above the values observed in the control (no amino acid ingestion) studies; p-AKTSer473 and p-AKTThr308 were not affected by whey protein or leucine ingestion. Whey protein ingestion decreased insulin-mediated glucose disposal (median 38.8 [quartiles 30.8, 61.8] vs. 51.9 [41.0, 77.3] µmol glucose/µU insulin · mL−1 · min−1; P < 0.01), whereas ingestion of leucine did not (52.3 [43.3, 65.4] vs. 52.3 [43.9, 73.2]). These results indicate that 1) protein ingestion causes insulin resistance and could be an important regulator of postprandial glucose homeostasis and 2) the insulin-desensitizing effect of protein ingestion is not due to inhibition of AKT by leucine-mediated mTOR signaling.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1939327X and 00121797
Volume :
64
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c9623bba4f870ab0ad85d1ed39f29bc6