Central nervous system and peripheral abnormalities: clues to the understanding of obesity and NIDDM
- 1 September 1994
- journal article
- other
- Published by Springer Nature in Diabetologia
- Vol. 37 (S2) , S169-S178
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00400841
Abstract
Summary To study the impact on glucose handling of the observed hyperinsulinaemia and hypercorticism of the genetically obese fa/fa rats, simplified animal models were used. In the first model, normal rats were exposed to hyperinsulinaemia for 4 days and compared to saline-infused controls. At the end of this experimental period, the acute effect of insulin was assessed during euglycaemic-hyperinsulinaemic clamps. White adipose tissue lipogenic activity was much more insulin responsive in the “insulinized” than in the control groups. Conversely muscles from “insulinized” rats became insulin resistant. Such divergent consequences of prior “insulinization” on white adipose tissue and muscle were corroborated by similar divergent changes in glucose transporter (GLUT 4) mRNA and protein levels in these respective tissues. In the second model, normal rats were exposed to stress levels of corticosterone for 2 days. This resulted in an insulin resistance of all muscle types that was due to an increased glucose-fatty acid cycle, without measurable alteration of the GLUT 4 system. In genetically obese (fa/fa) rats, local cerebral glucose utilization was decreased compared to lean controls. This could be the reason for adaptive changes leading to increased levels in their hypothalamic neuropeptide Y levels and median eminence corticotropin-releasing-factor. Thus, in a third model, neuropeptide Y was administered intracerebroventricularly to normal rats for 7 days. This produced hyperinsulinaemia, hypercorticosteronaemia, as well as most of the metabolic changes observed in the genetically obese fa/fa rats, including muscle insulin resistance. These data together suggest that the aetiology of obesity-insulin resistance of genetically obese rodents has to be searched within the brain, not peripherally.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hypothalamic Neuropeptide Y Messenger Ribonucleic Acid Levels in Pre‐Obese and Genetically Obese (fa/fa) Rats; Potential Regulation Thereof by Corticotropin‐Releasing FactorJournal of Neuroendocrinology, 1993
- Neuropeptide-Y Stimulation of Insulin Secretion is Mediated Via the Nucleus Tractus SolitariusHormone and Metabolic Research, 1992
- Hyperinsulinemia increases the amount of GLUT4 mRNA in white adipose tissue and decreases that of muscles : a clue for increased fat depot and insulin resistanceEndocrinology, 1990
- Increase of neuropeptide Y-like immunoreactivity in the paraventricular nucleus of fasting ratsNeuroscience Letters, 1989
- Neuro‐endocrine disorders seen as triggers of the triad: Obesity—insulin resistance—abnormal glucose toleranceDiabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews, 1985
- The origins and role of efferent vagal nuclei in hyperinsulinemia in hypothalamic and genetically obese rodentsJournal of the Autonomic Nervous System, 1983
- Decreased guanine nuleotide binding and reduced equivalent production by brown adipose tissue in hypothalamic obesityFEBS Letters, 1982
- Consequences of Ventromedial Hypothalamic Lesions upon Insulin and Glucagon Secretion by Subsequently Isolated Perfused Pancreases in the RatJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1980
- Immediate effect of lesion of the ventromedial hypothalamic area upon glucose-induced insulin secretion in anaesthetized ratsDiabetologia, 1977
- THE GLUCOSE FATTY-ACID CYCLE ITS ROLE IN INSULIN SENSITIVITY AND THE METABOLIC DISTURBANCES OF DIABETES MELLITUSPublished by Elsevier ,1963