Unraveling the temporal pattern of diet-induced insulin resistance in individual organs and cardiac dysfunction in C57BL/6 mice.
Journal
  Diabetes.
Citation
  Diabetes. 54(12):3530-40
Publication date
  2005 Dec
Authors
  Park SY
Cho YR
Kim HJ
Higashimori T
Danton C
Lee MK
Dey A
Rothermel B
Kim YB
Kalinowski A
Russell KS
Kim JK
Investigators
  Jason K. Kim
Grant agencies
  National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
Grants
  NIDDK P30-DK45735
NIDDK U24-DK-59635
NIDDK U24-DK59635-P
MeSH headings
  Animal Feed
Dietary Fats
Heart Diseases
Insulin
Insulin Resistance
MeSH qualifiers
  physiopathology
physiology
Abstract
  Type 2 diabetes is a heterogeneous disease characterized by insulin resistance and altered glucose and lipid metabolism in multiple organs. To understand the complex series of events that occur during the development of obesity-associated diabetes, we examined the temporal pattern of changes in insulin action and glucose metabolism in individual organs during chronic high-fat feeding in C57BL/6 mice. Insulin-stimulated cardiac glucose metabolism was significantly reduced after 1.5 weeks of high-fat feeding, and cardiac insulin resistance was associated with blunted Akt-mediated insulin signaling and GLUT4 levels. Insulin resistance in skeletal muscle, adipose tissue, and liver developed in parallel after 3 weeks of high-fat feeding. Diet-induced whole-body insulin resistance was associated with increased circulating levels of resistin and leptin but unaltered adiponectin levels. High-fat feeding caused insulin resistance in skeletal muscle that was associated with significantly elevated intramuscular fat content. In contrast, diet-induced hepatic insulin resistance developed before a marked increase in intrahepatic triglyceride levels. Cardiac function gradually declined over the course of high-fat feeding, and after 20 weeks of high-fat diet, cardiac dysfunction was associated with mild hyperglycemia, hyperleptinemia, and reduced circulating adiponectin levels. Our findings demonstrate that cardiac insulin resistance is an early adaptive event in response to obesity and develops before changes in whole-body glucose homeostasis. This suggests that obesity-associated defects in cardiac function may not be due to insulin resistance per se but may be attributable to chronic alteration in cardiac glucose and lipid metabolism and circulating adipokines.