4.4 Article

Insulin induces a shift in lipid and primary carbon metabolites in a model of fasting-induced insulin resistance

Journal

METABOLOMICS
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11306-017-1186-y

Keywords

Endocannabinoids; Fatty acids; Lipidomics; Metabolomics; Substrate metabolism

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Supplement to Support Diversity [R01HL09176-S]
  2. N.I.H. N.H.L.B.I. Career Development Award [K02HL103787]
  3. National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, University of California [CA154887]
  4. Cancer Research Coordinating Committee [CRN-17-427258]
  5. National Science Foundation
  6. University of California Senate Graduate Research Council
  7. Health Science Research Institute program grants
  8. N.I.H. N.H.L.B.I. [R01HL09176]
  9. N.I.H. West Coast Metabolomics Center [U24 DK097154]
  10. USDA [2032-51530-022-00D]

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Introduction Prolonged fasting in northern elephant seals (NES) is characterized by a reliance on lipid metabolism, conservation of protein, and reduced plasma insulin. During early fasting, glucose infusion previously reduced plasma free fatty acids (FFA); however, during late-fasting, it induced an atypical elevation in FFA despite comparable increases in insulin during both periods suggestive of a dynamic shift in tissue responsiveness to glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Objective To better assess the contribution of insulin to this fasting-associated shift in substrate metabolism. Methods We compared the responses of plasma metabolites (amino acids (AA), FFA, endocannabinoids (EC), and primary carbon metabolites (PCM)) to an insulin infusion (65 mU/kg) in early-and late-fasted NES pups (n = 5/group). Plasma samples were collected prior to infusion (T0) and at 10, 30, 60, and 120 min post-infusion, and underwent untargeted and targeted metabolomics analyses utilizing a variety of GC-MS and LC-MS technologies. Results In early fasting, the majority (72%) of metabolite trajectories return to baseline levels within 2 h, but not in late fasting indicative of an increase in tissue sensitivity to insulin. In late-fasting, increases in FFA and ketone pools, coupled with decreases in AA and PCM, indicate a shift toward lipolysis, beta-oxidation, ketone metabolism, and decreased protein catabolism. Conversely, insulin increased PCM AUC in late fasting suggesting that gluconeogenic pathways are activated. Insulin also decreased FFA AUC between early and late fasting suggesting that insulin suppresses triglyceride hydrolysis. Conclusion Naturally adapted tolerance to prolonged fasting in these mammals is likely accomplished by suppressing insulin levels and activity, providing novel insight on the evolution of insulin during a condition of temporary, reversible insulin resistance.

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