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Plasma acylcarnitine profiles suggest incomplete long-chain fatty acid [beta]-oxidation and altered tricarboxylic acid cycle activity in type 2 diabetic African-American women

Authors :
Adams, Sean H.
Hoppel, Charles L.
Lok, Kerry H.
Zhao, Ling
Wong, Scott W.
Minkler, Paul E.
Hwang, Daniel H.
Newman, John W.
Garvey, W. Timothy
Source :
The Journal of Nutrition. June, 2009, Vol. 139 Issue 6, p1073, 9 p.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Inefficient muscle long-chain fatty acid (LCFA) combustion is associated with insulin resistance, but molecular links between mitochondrial fat catabolism and insulin action remain controversial. We hypothesized that plasma acylcarnitine profiling would identify distinct metabolite patterns reflective of muscle fat catabolism when comparing individuals bearing a missense G304A uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3 g/a) polymorphism to controls, because UCP3 is predominantly expressed in skeletal muscle and g/a individuals have reduced whole-body fat oxidation. MS analyses of 42 carnitine moieties in plasma samples from fasting type 2 diabetics (n = 44) and nondiabetics (n = 12) with or without the UCP3 g/a polymorphism (n = 28/ genotype: 22 diabetic, 6 nondiabetic/genotype) were conducted. Contrary to our hypothesis, genotype had a negligible impact on plasma metabolite patterns. However, a comparison of nondiabetics vs. type 2 diabetics revealed a striking increase in the concentrations of fatty acylcarnitines reflective of incomplete LCFA [beta]-oxidation in the latter (i.e. summed C 10- to C14-carnitine concentrations were ~300% of controls; P = 0.004). Across all volunteers (n = 56), acetylcarnitine rose and propionylcarnitine decreased with increasing hemoglobin Alc (r = 0.544, P < 0.0001; and r = -0.308, P < 0.05, respectively) and with increasing total plasma acylcarnitine concentration. In proof-of-concept studies, we made the novel observation that C12-C14 acylcarnitines significantly stimulated nuclear factor [kappa]-B activity (up to 200% of controls) in RAW264.7 cells. These results are consistent with the working hypothesis that inefficient tissue LCFA [beta]-oxidation, due in part to a relatively low tricarboxylic acid cycle capacity, increases tissue accumulation of acetyl-CoA and generates chain-shortened acylcarnitine molecules that activate proinflammatory pathways implicated in insulin resistance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00223166
Volume :
139
Issue :
6
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
The Journal of Nutrition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.201030183