4.7 Article

Time Course of Molecular and Metabolic Events in the Development of Insulin Resistance in Fructose-Fed Rats

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages 1862-1874

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00043

Keywords

glucose and lipid metabolism; liver; urine metabolomics; insulin resistance; fructose

Funding

  1. AlimH INRA Department

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We aimed to determine the time-course of metabolic changes related to the early onset of insulin resistance (IR), trying to evidence breaking points preceding the appearance of the clinical IR phenotype. The model chosen was the fructose (FRU)-fed rat compared to controls fed with starch. We focused on the hepatic metabolism after 0, 5, 12, 30, or 45 days of FRU intake. The hepatic molecular metabolic changes followed indeed a multistep trajectory rather than a continuous progression. After 5 d of FRU feeding, we observed deep modifications in the hepatic metabolism, driven by the induction of lipogenic genes and important glycogen depletion. Thereafter, a steady-state period between days 12 and 30 was observed, characterized by a switch from carbohydrate to lipid utilisation at the hepatic level and increased insulin levels aiming at alleviating lipid accumulation and hyperglycemia, respectively. The FRU-fed animals were only clinically IR at day 45 (altered homeostasis model assessment-estimated insulin resistance and muscle glucose transport). Furthermore, the urine metabolome revealed even earlier metabolic trajectory changes that precede the hepatic alterations. We identified several candidate metabolites linked to the tryptophan nicotinamide metabolism and the installation of fasting hyperglycemia that suggest a role of this metabolic pathway on the development of the IR phenotype in the FRU-fed rats.

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