[HTML][HTML] Muscle mitochondrial ATP synthesis and glucose transport/phosphorylation in type 2 diabetes

J Szendroedi, AI Schmid, M Chmelik, C Toth… - PLoS …, 2007 - journals.plos.org
J Szendroedi, AI Schmid, M Chmelik, C Toth, A Brehm, M Krssak, P Nowotny, M Wolzt…
PLoS medicine, 2007journals.plos.org
Background Muscular insulin resistance is frequently characterized by blunted increases in
glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) reflecting impaired glucose transport/phosphorylation. These
abnormalities likely relate to excessive intramyocellular lipids and mitochondrial dysfunction.
We hypothesized that alterations in insulin action and mitochondrial function should be
present even in nonobese patients with well-controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).
Methods and Findings We measured G-6-P, ATP synthetic flux (ie, synthesis) and lipid …
Background
Muscular insulin resistance is frequently characterized by blunted increases in glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) reflecting impaired glucose transport/phosphorylation. These abnormalities likely relate to excessive intramyocellular lipids and mitochondrial dysfunction. We hypothesized that alterations in insulin action and mitochondrial function should be present even in nonobese patients with well-controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).
Methods and Findings
We measured G-6-P, ATP synthetic flux (i.e., synthesis) and lipid contents of skeletal muscle with 31P/1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy in ten patients with T2DM and in two control groups: ten sex-, age-, and body mass-matched elderly people; and 11 younger healthy individuals. Although insulin sensitivity was lower in patients with T2DM, muscle lipid contents were comparable and hyperinsulinemia increased G-6-P by 50% (95% confidence interval [CI] 39%–99%) in all groups. Patients with diabetes had 27% lower fasting ATP synthetic flux compared to younger controls (p = 0.031). Insulin stimulation increased ATP synthetic flux only in controls (younger: 26%, 95% CI 13%–42%; older: 11%, 95% CI 2%–25%), but failed to increase even during hyperglycemic hyperinsulinemia in patients with T2DM. Fasting free fatty acids and waist-to-hip ratios explained 44% of basal ATP synthetic flux. Insulin sensitivity explained 30% of insulin-stimulated ATP synthetic flux.
Conclusions
Patients with well-controlled T2DM feature slightly lower flux through muscle ATP synthesis, which occurs independently of glucose transport /phosphorylation and lipid deposition but is determined by lipid availability and insulin sensitivity. Furthermore, the reduction in insulin-stimulated glucose disposal despite normal glucose transport/phosphorylation suggests further abnormalities mainly in glycogen synthesis in these patients.
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