当前位置: 首页 > 医学版 > 期刊论文 > 内科学 > 糖尿病学杂志 > 2005年 > 第3期 > 正文
编号:11256338
Thiazolidinediones Upregulate Fatty Acid Uptake and Oxidation in Adipose Tissue of Diabetic Patients
     1 Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

    2 General Clinical Research Center, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

    3 Wistar Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

    ABSTRACT

    Thiazolidinediones (TZDs) are a new class of insulin-sensitizing drugs. To explore how and in which tissues they improve insulin action, we obtained fat and muscle biopsies from eight patients with type 2 diabetes before and 2 months after treatment with rosiglitazone (n = 5) or troglitazone (n = 3). TZD treatment was associated with a coordinated upregulation in the expression of genes and synthesis of proteins involved in fatty acid uptake, binding, -oxidation and electron transport, and oxidative phosphorylation in subcutaneous fat but not in skeletal muscle. These changes were accompanied by a 13% increase in total body fat oxidation, a 20% decrease in plasma free fatty acid levels, and a 46% increase in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. We conclude that TZDs induced a coordinated stimulation of fatty acid uptake, oxidation, and oxidative phosphorylation in fat of diabetic patients and thus may have corrected, at least partially, a recently recognized defect in patients with type 2 diabetes consisting of reduced expression of genes related to oxidative metabolism and mitochondrial function.

    Thiazolidinediones (TZDs), a new class of insulin-sensitizing drugs, are strong peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) agonists (1). As their binding affinity to PPAR correlates well with their insulin sensitizing activity, it is generally accepted that TZDs exert their insulin sensitizing action through PPAR (2,3). However, exactly how and where TZDs increase insulin sensitivity remains incompletely understood. PPAR is expressed at highest concentrations in adipose tissue and at much lower concentrations in liver and muscle (4,5), suggesting that the primary action of TZDs is on adipose tissue. This raises the question of how TZDs produce insulin sensitization, which takes place primarily in skeletal muscle (6). Lowering plasma free fatty acid (FFA) levels improves insulin sensitivity (7). The well-established TZD lowering of plasma FFAs has therefore been widely considered to be a major factor responsible for their insulin sensitizing effect (8eC12). It is, however, not clear how TZDs lower FFA levels. Since they seem to have little or no effect on basal rates of lipolysis (11,13,14), the decrease in plasma FFA levels is probably due to an increase in FFA clearance (oxidation and/or esterification). Supporting this notion, we have recently found that TZD-induced lowering of plasma FFAs was associated with an increase in total body fatty acid oxidation (FOX) (14). This study, however, provided no information as to the location (fat, muscle, or both) or the mechanism by which TZDs stimulated FOX. To further explore these issues, we have now investigated the effects of TZD treatment on the expression of genes related to fatty acid uptake and oxidation in subcutaneous fat and in skeletal muscle of patients with type 2 diabetes.

    RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS

    We studied eight patients with type 2 diabetes (Table 1). Two were treated with sulfonylureas, two with sulfonylureas and metformin, two received sulfonylureas, metformin, and NPH insulin (10eC25 units at bedtime), and two received insulin twice daily. These medications were withheld at least 72 h before hospital admission but were otherwise continued throughout the studies. Informed written consent was obtained from all subjects after explanation of the nature, purpose, and potential risks of the studies. The study protocol was approved by the institutional review board of Temple University Hospital.

    All patients were admitted to the general clinical research center at Temple University Hospital the night before the study. At 8:00 A.M. on the day of the study, a fat and muscle biopsy was obtained from the subcutaneous fat of the upper thigh and the lateral vastus muscle, respectively, and rates of fat oxidation (FOX) were determined by indirect calorimetry. After that, the patients were started on TZDs. After 2 months on TZD therapy, they were readmitted for another fat and muscle biopsy and FOX measurement. The initial three patients received troglitazone (600 mg/day) and the other five patients received rosiglitazone (8 mg/day). The change was necessary because troglitazone was withdrawn from the U.S. market after the study had begun.

    Fat and muscle biopsies.

    Under local anesthesia (1% lidocaine in a field block pattern), an incision (1 inch) was made through the skin at the lateral aspect of the upper thigh (15 cm above the patella) and 200 mg of subcutaneous adipose tissue was mobilized and excised. Through the same incision, biopsies (100 mg) were obtained from the lateral aspect of the vastus lateralis muscle. The excised fat and muscle samples were dropped immediately into isopentane, kept at its freezing point (eC160°C) by liquid nitrogen, and stored at eC80°C until used for RNA extraction.

    Array hybridization.

    The cDNA filter arrays were prepared by the Wistar Institute Genomics facility (available at www.wistar.upenn.edu/genomics and ref. 16). A 7.5 x 11.5-cm nylon filter (HA-04) carrying a total of 9,600 probes was used. Sequence-verified clones were purchased from Research Genetics (Huntsville, AL). Total RNA was isolated from the aqueous phase by isopropanol precipitation after homogenization in phenol-guanidine thiocyanate (Tri-Reagent Molecular Research Center, Cincinnati, OH). Total RNA samples were amplified (aRNA) using a modified T7 protocol for fat (available at http://cmgm.Stanford.edu/pbrown/protocols) and muscle (MessageAmp; Ambion, Austin, TX). Each sample (total 32) was hybridized to a single array, as materials were limited. The average relative error between arrays was <9% when they were hybridized in triplicate under our standard conditions (data not shown). All hybridization steps were carried out in a hybridization oven with constant rotation: prehybridization 1 was in 3 ml of MicroHyb (Research Genetics) and 1 e/ml of salmon sperm DNA for 1 h at 42°C then removed. A total of 2.5 ml of MicroHyb with 1 e/ml of denatured human Cot-1 DNA and 1 e/ml of PolydA (Prehyb2) was added and filters incubated for 2 h at 42°C. The aRNA target was labeled with 33P (30005-000 Ci/mmol; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) using reverse transcriptase. The denatured 33P target (0.8 e) was added to Prehyb 2, and filters were incubated at 42°C for 18 h. Filters were washed two times in 2x SSC/1% SDS, one time in 0.5x SSC/1% SDS, and one time in 0.1x SSC/0.5% SDS each for 30' at 55°C. The fat filters received an additional wash of 0.1x SSC/0.1% SDS at 60°C then all filters exposed to a phophorimager screen for 6 and 14 days for fat and muscle, respectively. Screens were scanned at 50-e?resolution in a Storm PhosphorImager and visualized using ImageQuant (Molecular Dynamics).

    Array analysis.

    Arrays were analyzed with ImaGene 5.1 (Biodiscovery, El Segundo, CA), and the median pixel value was calculated for each spot after subtraction of the local background. The calculated values were exported to Microsoft Excel and the values for each spot normalized by dividing the signal reference, which is the calculated median pixel value for all 9,600 background-subtracted spots on the array (normalized median density). The dynamic range of array signals was on average 7eC10,000 (16). The detection limit for these conditions and arrays was calibrated by quantitative PCR. Standard curves were generated using known amounts of a purified gene-specific template. PCR values from the RNA were mapped to that standard curve. The lowest detectable signal that was considered reliable was a normalized median density three times the global array background a value of 0.15. PCR data for samples with 0.15 signal level on the arrays was equivalent to 0.03 molecules/cell (16). A TZD effect was only considered significant if there was a statistically significant change of twofold or greater in gene expression between pre- and posttreatment.

    Real-time RT-PCR.

    One-step real-time RT-PCR was performed with random hexamers and amplified by one-step RT-PCR (Titanium kit; Becton Dickinson Biosciences, Palo Alto, CA) and with a LightCycler (Roche, Indianapolis, IN) equipped with an emission filter (at 530 nm) for SYBR green I fluorescence measurement and analyzed by the Relative Quantification Software provided by the manufacturer. Reverse transcription: 50°C for 30 min; denaturation: 95°C for 0 min; amplification: 95°C for 0 min, 55eC65°C for 15 s, and 72°C for 13 s for 40 cycles; melting curve: 95°C for 0 min, 65°C for 10 s, and 95°C for 0 min, cooling 40°C for 30 s. Primer sequences are listed in Table 2. Cycle of threshold (Ct), relative concentration, standard curve, coefficient of correlation, and efficiency of each amplification was calculated with the Relative Quantification Software (as provided by the manufacturer). A standard curve of Ct versus concentrations was obtained using several dilutions of control RNA (10eC150 ng). Control RNAs were human adult adipose tissue RNA and skeletal muscle RNA (purchased from BioChain, Haywood, CA). Real-time RT-PCR of an internal standard was run separately using primers of 18s rRNA at a ratio of 4:6 (competimer to primer) (QuantumRNA 18s internal standards; Ambion, Austin, TX). Data were presented as a ratio of the relative concentration of the amplicon after drug and the relative concentration of the amplicon before drug (A-to-B ratio) for each patient. This ratio was normalized by the A-to-B ratio of the internal standard 18s rRNA. The average normalized A-to-B ratio for each amplicon is presented in Table 3.

    Western blot.

    Fat tissues were homogenized in T-Per tissue protein extraction reagent and the halt protease inhibitor cocktail for 60 s (Pierce, Rockford, IL). The soluble proteins were collected after centrifugation at 10,000g for 15 min at 4°C. Protein concentrations were determined with Coomassie plus protein assay reagent using BSA as standard.

    Soluble proteins, 35 e per lane, were resolved in 8eC16% SDS-PAGE and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. CD-36 immunoblots were probed for 1 h with a monoclonal anti-CD36 antibody at 1:1,000 (Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA). Cytochrome C was detected with a monoclonal mouse anti-pigeon cytochrome C antibody (diluted 1:1,000; Imgenex, San Diego, CA). -Actin was detected with a monoclonal mouse anti-human -actin antibody (diluted 1:4,000; Santa Cruz). A horseradish peroxidase conjugate goat anti-mouse IgM antibody (A-8786m; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was applied for 1 h at 1:5,000. Immunoreactivity was detected by chemiluminescence. Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (ACADM) immunoblots were probed with a rabbit polyclonal anti-ACADM antibody at 1:1,000 (AG Scientific, San Diego, CA) at 4°C overnight. A horseradish peroxidase conjugate goat anti-rabbit IgG antibody was applied for 1 h at 1:200,000. Immunoreactivity was detected by Femto Maximum Sensitivity Substrate and Cl-Xposure film (Pierce). The signal was scanned by Hewlett-Packard Scanjet and quantitated by Scion Image (Scion, Frederick, MD).

    Statistical analysis.

    All data are expressed as means ± SE. Statistical significance was assessed using repeated-measures ANOVA and paired student’s two-tailed t test when applicable.

    RESULTS

    Adipose tissue

    Effect of TZDs on gene expression.

    TZD treatment of the eight patients with type 2 diabetes (Table 1) was associated with a statistically significant twofold or greater increase in the expression (by microarray) of 107 gene sequences and a twofold or greater decrease in the expression of six gene sequences (online appendix [available at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org]). Of those that had increased, 95 included genes related to carbohydrate or protein metabolism, signal transduction, cell growth and development, transcription factors, nuclear proteins, and others (online appendix), and 12 gene sequences were functionally related to either fatty acid uptake and binding (fatty acid translocase/CD36, fatty acid binding proteins 4 and 6 and fatty acid CoA ligase) or -oxidation (acyl-CoA dehydrogenase and acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase) or mitochondrial electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation (cytochrome c, NADH dehydrogenase and ATPase) (Table 3). Individual changes in the expression of eight of those gene sequences are shown in Fig. 1 (upper panels).

    Real time RT-PCR confirmed the differential induction of these eight gene sequences (Fig. 1, lower panels). There were no consistent differences between troglitazone- and rosiglitazone-induced changes (Fig. 1). The results of both were therefore combined for statistical evaluation (Table 3).

    Effect on FAT/CD36, ACADM, and cytochrome C protein.

    Protein mass was determined with immuoblots in fat biopsies for three proteins for which antibodies were commercially available. FAT/CD36 mass increased 3.8-fold in four patients (2.2-, 4.1-, 7.7-, and 1.2-fold, respectively; two treated with troglitazone and two with rosiglitazone) after TZD treatment (P < 0.03) (Fig. 2). ACADM mass increased 2.0-fold (P < 0.05, Fig. 2) in fat from three patients (1.7-, 1.4-, and 3.0-fold, respectively; one treated with troglitazone and two with rosiglitazone). Cytochrome C (HCS) mass increased 5.7-fold in fat from two patients (8.4- and 3.0-fold, respectively) treated with rosiglitazone.

    Skeletal muscle

    Effects of TZDs on gene expression.

    None of the gene sequences whose expression was increased in fat was significantly induced in skeletal muscle. Expression of FAT/CD36, in fact, was significantly reduced (Table 3).

    Plasma FFA, FOX, and glucose uptake.

    As reported previously, TZD treatment in these patients resulted in a 20% lowering of basal plasma FFA levels (P < 0.02), a 13% increase in basal total body FOX (P < 0.05), and a 46% increase in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake (P < 0.01) (Table 4) (14).

    DISCUSSION

    To explore where and how TZDs improve insulin sensitivity, we examined gene expression in subcutaneous fat and skeletal muscle biopsies of eight patients with type 2 diabetes. The key findings were that 2 months of treatment with TZDs was associated with a coordinated twofold or greater increased expression in fat but not in skeletal muscle of a number of genes coding for proteins related to uptake, binding, -oxidation, electron transport, and oxidative phosphorylation of fatty acids. Specifically, we found significantly increased expression of FAT/CD36, fatty acid binding proteins 4 and 6 (proteins involved in high-affinity, saturable, fatty acid transport and utilization [17]) of fatty acid CoA ligase (a protein that makes fatty acid transport unidirectional by converting fatty acids, which have crossed the cell membrane, into acyl-CoA derivatives that prevent their efflux out of cells) (18), ACADM and acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase (the first and the last of the 4 -oxidation enzymes), HCS, the -subcomplex of NADH-dehydrogenase, and the F0 and F1 complexes of ATPase (sequences that are part of the electron transport chain and of oxidative phosphorylation). TZD induction of these gene sequences was confirmed by real-time RT-PCR (Fig. 1). These results confirm, in human fat, previous findings by others in white adipose tissue of rodents that have shown that TZDs induced expression of FAT/CD36, fatty acid binding protein, fatty acid CoA ligase, and ACADM (12,18,19). The current study is, as far as we know, the first to demonstrate that TZDs induced expression of gene sequences that are part of the electron transport chain and of oxidative phosphorylation and, more importantly, that they promote a coordinated upregulation of all these functionally related genes in human adipose tissue.

    TZDs had no significant effects in skeletal muscle on expression of any of these gene sequences. This suggested that these PPAR agonists had little if any direct action on fatty acid uptake and oxidation in skeletal muscle and is in line with the observation that PPAR is expressed very little in muscle (4,5). Nevertheless, direct effects of TZDs on skeletal muscle have been reported (20) and cannot be completely ruled out with this study because it is possible that even smaller changes than those we considered significant in the expression of several functionally related genes can have biological effects (21,22) and because of the relatively short period of treatment (2 months) and the fact that most patients were on other antidiabetic medications.

    The TZD-mediated induction of expression of genes related to FFA uptake, -oxidation, and electron transport (FAT/CD36, ACADM, and HCS) in fat was accom-panied by increases of comparable magnitude of the respective proteins.

    It is currently believed that in adipose tissue, PPAR is critically important for adipocyte differentiation and fat storage, whereas in the liver, PPAR plays an important role in fatty acid oxidation (23). Our results suggest that this concept should be expanded to include TZD stimulation of FOX in adipose tissue. How TZDs stimulated FOX, however, is not clear. It is possible that TZDs induced expression of all these FFA uptake and oxidation-related genes simultaneously. It appears more likely, however, that the primary event was induction of the transport-related genes, particularly FAT/CD36 (24,25), and that the increased fatty acid flux then enhanced expression of the oxidation-related genes. In support of this notion, Ibrahim et al. (25) have shown that muscle targeted overexpression of FAT/CD36 produced a large (five- to sixfold) increase in FOX. This indicated not only a tight coupling between FFA uptake and oxidation but also that FFA uptake was rate limiting (25).

    The demonstrated TZD-induced induction of genes involved in fatty acid uptake and oxidation in adipose tissue raises several questions. First, to what extent could it account for the observed increase in total body FOX Second, to what extent could it account for the decrease in plasma FFA And third, to what extent could it account for the improvement in insulin sensitivity in these patients (14) (Table 4) With respect to FOX, TZDs have been shown to not affect FFA uptake and oxidation by the liver (19). The current study showed that they also have little or no effect on muscle. This leaves fat, where a 2- to 2.5-fold increase in fat oxidation (i.e., an increase similar to the observed change in gene expression) could have been sufficient to explain the observed 13% increase in total body FOX. This is based on the following consideration. In vitro O2 consumption by adipose tissue from obese adults has been determined to be 0.39 ml · kgeC1 · mineC1 (26). Thus, O2 consumption by fat in our patients can be estimated to have been 14 ml O2/min (0.39 ml O2 · kgeC1 · mineC1 x 35.87 kg) or 5% of their total O2 consumption, which was 273 ml/min. These in vitro results, however, might not accurately reflect O2 in vivo adipocyte O2 consumption.

    With respect to plasma FFA, our results suggested that it was the TZD-mediated increase in adipose tissue FOX that was responsible for the observed 20% decrease in basal plasma FFA levels (14). The reason for this is that there is usually a close and positive correlation between plasma FFA levels and FOX. Therefore, had the decrease in plasma FFA been the primary TZD effect, FOX should have decreased. In addition, TZDs could have lowered FFAs by increased FFA esterification via increased glyceroneogenesis (by induction of PEPCK) (27).

    The results of the current and other studies suggest that TZDs improve insulin sensitivity indirectly and by several mechanisms. First, there is strong evidence that TZDs increase insulin sensitivity by lowering plasma FFAs (7,12). These FFA-induced changes in insulin sensitivity in muscle are now recognized to be associated with changes in intramyocellular diacylglycerol content and protein kinase C activity, which can cause insulin resistance by serine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor substrate-1, resulting in interruption of insulin signaling (28). Further, by selectively stimulating FFA uptake and FOX in fat, TZDs can decrease FFA uptake in muscle (29), which would increase insulin sensitivity (30).

    FFA-mediated changes in insulin sensitivity are dose dependent and proportional (31). It is therefore not likely that the observed 46% increase in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake (Table 4) can be fully explained by the 20% decrease in plasma FFA levels. This suggested that other factors contributed to the TZD effect on insulin sensitivity. Such factors may include the TZD-mediated increase in the expression and protein concentration of adiponectin that occurred in these patients (14). Adiponectin is a protein that is exclusively produced by adipocytes and that has been shown to increase insulin sensitivity (32eC36). TZDs have also been shown to increase the number of small adipocytes that are more insulin sensitive than large adipocytes (14,37). Moreover, TZDs have been shown to shift the balance of adipose tissue away from visceral to subcutaneous fat (38,39), which may be important because visceral fat seems to cause more insulin resistance than subcutaneous fat. Lastly, TZDs activate AMP kinase and lower malonyl-CoA, which increases FOX (40).

    In summary, we have shown that 2 months of treatment with TZDs induced a coordinated upregulation of transcripts of proteins involved in fatty acid uptake, binding, -oxidation, electron transport, and oxidative phosphorylation in adipose tissue of patients with type 2 diabetes. These changes were associated with an increase in total body FOX, a decrease in plasma FFA levels, and an increase in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake (insulin sensitivity). We conclude that the TZD-induced expression of fat uptake and oxidation genes and of FOX in human adipose tissue contributed to the TZD-mediated decrease in plasma FFA levels and the increased insulin sensitivity. In addition, microarray and RT-PCR data suggested that TZDs improved expression of multiple genes in fat related to oxidative metabolism and mitochondrial function, which has recently been reported to be defective in the skeletal muscle of patients with type 2 diabetes (22,41eC43).

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants R01-AG15353, R01-DK58895, R01-HL0733267, and R01-DK066003 and a mentor-based training grant from the American Diabetes Association (to G.B.). We thank the Molecular Core Facility of the Center for Substance Abuse (grant no. P30-DA13429) for letting us use their Roche Light-Cycler for the real-time RT-PCR measurement.

    We thank the nurses of the general clinical research center for help with the studies and for excellent patient care, Karen Kresge for outstanding technical assistance, and Constance Harris Crews for typing the manuscript.

    FOOTNOTES

    Additional information for this article can be found in an online appendix at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org.

    ACADM, acyl-CoA dehydrogenase; FFA, free fatty acid; FOX, fatty acid oxidation; HCS, cytochrome C; PPAR, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor ; TZD, thiazolidinedione

    REFERENCES

    Saltiel AR, Olefsky JM: Thiazolidinediones in the treatment of insulin resistance and type II diabetes. Diabetes45 :1661 eC1669,1996

    Lehmann JM, Moore LB, Smith-Oliver TA, Wilkison WO, Willson TM, Kliewer SA: An antidiabetic thiazolidinedione is a high affinity ligand for peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR-). J Biol Chem270 :12953 eC12956,1995

    Willson TM, Cobb JE, Cowan DJ, Wiethe RW, Correa ID, Prakash SR, Beck KD, Moore LB, Kliewer SA, Lehmann JM: The structure-activity relationship between peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor agonism and the antihyperglycemic activity of thiazolidinediones. J Med Chem39 :665 eC668,1996

    Tontonoz P, Hu E, Graves RA, Budavari AI, Spiegelman BM: mPPAR gamma 2: tissue-specific regulator of an adipocyte enhancer. Genes Dev8 :1224 eC1234,1994

    Kruszynska YT, Mukherjee R, Jow L, Dana S, Paterniti JR, Olefsky JM: Skeletal muscle peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma expression in obesity and non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. J Clin Invest101 :543 eC548,1998

    DeFronzo RA, Jacot E, Jequier E, Maeder E, Wahren J, Felber JP: The effect of insulin on the disposal of intravenous glucose: results from indirect calorimetry and hepatic and femoral venous catheterization. Diabetes30 :1000 eC1007,1981

    Santomauro ATMG, Boden G, Silva MER, Rocha DM, Santos RF, Ursich MJM, Strassmann PG, Wajchenberg BL: Overnight lowering of free fatty acids with acipimox improves insulin resistance and glucose tolerance in obese diabetic and nondiabetic subjects. Diabetes48 :1836 eC1841,1999

    Ghazzi MN, Perez JE, Antonucci TK, Driscoll JH, Huang SM, Faja BW, Whitcomb RW: Cardiac and glycemic benefits of troglitazone treatment in NIDDM: the Troglitazone Study Group. Diabetes46 :433 eC439,1997

    Chaput E, Saladin R, Silvestre M, Edgar AD: Fenofibrate and rosiglitazone lower serum triglycerides with opposing effects on body weight. Biochem Biophys Res Commun271 :445 eC450,2000

    Maggs DG, Buchanan TA, Burant CF, Cline G, Gumbiner B, Hseuh WA, Inzucchi S, Kelley D, Nolan J, Olefsky JM, Polonsky KS, Silver D, Valiquett TR, Shulman GI: Metabolic effects of troglitazone monotherapy in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Ann Intern Med128 :176 eC185,1998

    Mayerson AB, Hundal RS, Dufour S: The effects of rosiglitazone on insulin sensitivity, lipolysis, and hepatic and skeletal muscle triglyceride content in patients with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes51 :797 eC802,2002

    Way JM, Harrington WW, Brown KK, Gottschalk WK, Sundseth SS, Mansfield TA, Ramachandran RK, Willson TM, Kliewer SA: Comprehensive messenger ribonucleic acid profiling reveals that peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor activation has coordinate effects on gene expression in multiple insulin-sensitive tissues. Endocrinology142 :1269 eC1277,2001

    Racette SB, Davis AO, McGill JB, Klein S: Thiazolidinediones enhance insulin-mediated suppression of fatty acid flux in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Metabolism51 :169 eC174,2002

    Boden G, Cheung P, Mozzoli M, Fried SK: Effect thiazolidinediones on glucose and fatty acid metabolism in patients with type 2 diabetes. Metabolism52 :753 eC759,2003

    Tappy L, Owen OW, Boden G: Effect of hyperinsulinemia on urea pool size and substrate oxidation rates. Diabetes37 :1212 eC1216,1988

    Kari L, Loboda A, Nebozhyn M, Rook AH, Vonderheid EC, Nichols C, Virok D, Chang C, Horng WH, Johnson J, Wysocka M, Showe MK, Showe LC: Classification and prediction of survival in patients with the leukemic phase of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. J Exp Med197 :1477 eC1488,2003

    Abumrad N, el-Maghrabi M, Amri E, Lopez E, Grimaldi P: Cloning of a rat adipocyte membrane protein implicated in binding or transport of long-chain fatty acids that is induced during preadipocyte differentiation: homology with human CD36. J Biol Chem268 :17665 eC17668,1992

    Martin G, Schoonjans K, Lefebvre AM, Staels B, Auwerx J: Coordinate regulation of the expression of the fatty acid transport protein and acyl-CoA synthetase genes by PPAR and PPAR activators. J Biol Chem272 :28210 eC28217,1997

    Motojima K, Passilly P, Peters JM, Gonzalez FJ, Latruffe N: Expression of putative fatty acid transporter genes are regulated by peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor and activators in a tissue- and inducer-specific manner. J Biol Chem273 :16710 eC16714,1998

    Wilmsen HM, Ciaraldi TP, Carter L, Reehman N, Mudaliar SR, Henry RR: Thiazolidinediones upregulate impaired fatty acid uptake in skeletal muscle of type 2 diabetic subjects. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab285 :E354 eCE362,2003

    Brown GC: Control of respiration and ATP synthesis in mammalian mitochondria and cells. Biochem J284 :1 eC13,1992

    Mootha VK, Lindgren CM, Eriksson KF, Subramanian A, Sihag S, Lehar J, Puigserver P, Carlsson E, Ridderstrale M, Laurilla E, Houstis N, Daly MJ, Patterson N, Mesirov JP, Golub TR, Tamayo P, Spiegelman B, Lander ES, Hirschhorn JN, Altshuler D, Groop LC: PGC-1-responsive genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation are coordinately downregulated in human diabetes. Nat Genet34 :267 eC273,2003

    Rosen ED, Spiegelman BM: PPAR: a nuclear regulator of metabolism, differentiation, and cell growth. J Biol Chem276 :37731 eC37734,2001

    Hajri T, Abumrad NA: Fatty acid transport across membranes: relevance to nutrition and metabolic pathology. Ann Rev Nutr22 :383 eC415,2002

    Ibrahimi A, Bonrn S, Blinn WD, Hajri T, Li X, Zhong K, Cameron R, Abumrad NA: Muscle-specific overexpression of FAT/CD36 enhances fatty acid oxidation by contracting muscle, reduces plasma triglycerides and fatty acids, and increases plasma glucose and insulin. J Biol Chem274 :26761 eC26766,1999

    Hallgren P, Sjostrom L, Hedlund H, Lundell L, Olbe L: Influence of age, fat cell weight, and obesity on O2 consumption of human adipose tissue. Am J Physiol256 :E467 eCE474,1989

    Tordjman J, Chauvet G, Quette J, Beale EG, Forest C, Antoine B: Thiazolidinediones block fatty acid release by inducing glyceroneogenesis in fat cells. J Biol Chem278 :18785 eC18790,2003

    Itani SI, Ruderman NB, Schmieder F, Boden G: Lipid-induced insulin resistance in human muscle is associated with changes in diacylglycerol, protein kinase C, and IB-. Diabetes51 :2005 eC2010,2002

    Martin G, Schoonjans K, Staels B, Auwerz AJ: PPAR activators improve glucose homeostasis by stimulating fatty acid uptake in the adipocytes. Atherosclerosis137 (Suppl.) :S75 eCS80,1998

    Boden G: A fundamental and clinical text. In Diabetes Mellitus. 3rd Ed. LeRoith DE, Taylor SI, Olefsky JM, Eds. Philadelphia, Lippincott, Williams, and Wilkins,2004 , p.979 eC986

    Boden G: Free fatty acids (FFA) a link between obesity and insulin resistance. Front Biosci3 :169 eC175,1998

    Maeda N, Takahashi M, Funahashi T, Kihara S, Nishizawa H, Kishida K, Nagaretani H, Matsuda M, Komuro R, Ouchi N, Kuriyama H, Hotta K, Nakamura T, Shimomura I, Matsuzawa Y: PPAR ligands increase expression and plasma concentrations of adiponectin, an adipose-derived protein. Diabetes50 :2094 eC2099,2001

    Hotta K, Funahashi T, Arita Y, Takahashi M, Matsuda M, Okamoto Y, Iwahashi H, Kuriyama H, Ouchi N, Maeda K, Nishida M, Kihara S, Sakai N, Nakajima T, Hasegawa K, Muraguchi M, Ohmoto Y, Nakamura T, Yamashita S, Hanafusa T, Matsuzawa Y: Plasma concentrations of a novel, adipose-specific protein, adiponectin, in type 2 diabetic patients. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol20 :1595 eC1599,2000

    Krssak M, Petersen KF, Dresner A, DiPeitro L, Vogel SM, Rothman DL, Shulman GI, Roden M: Intramyocellular lipid concentrations are correlated with insulin sensitivity in humans: a 1H NMR spectroscopy study. Diabetologia42 :13 eC116,1999

    Combs TP, Berg AH, Obici S, Scherer PE, Rossetti L: Endogenous glucose production is inhibited by the adipose-derived protein Acrp30. J Clin Invest108 :1875 eC1881,2001

    Yamauchi T, Kamon J, Minokoshi Y, Ito Y, Waki H, Uchida S, Yamashita S, Noda M, Kita S, Ueki K, Eto K, Akanuma Y, Froguel P, Foufelle F, Ferre P, Carling D, Kimura S, Nagai R, Kahn BB, Kadowaki T: The fat-derived hormone adiponectin reverses insulin resistance associated with both lipoatrophy and obesity. Nat Med7 :941 eC946,2001

    Okuno A, Tamemotto H, Tobe K, Ueki K, Mori Y, Iwamoto K, Umesono K, Akanuma Y, Fujiwara T, Horikoshi H, Yazaki Y, Kadowaki T: Troglitazone increases the number of small adipocytes without the change of white adipose tissue mass in obese Zucker rats. J Clin Invest101 :1354 eC1361,1998

    deSouza CJ, Eckhardt M, Gagen K, Dong M, Chen W, Laurent D, Burkey BF: Effects of pioglitazone on adipose tissue remodeling within the setting of obesity and insulin resistance. Diabetes50 :1863 eC1871,2001

    Miyazaki Y, Mahankali A, Matsuda M, Mahankali S, Hardies J, Cusi K, Mandarino LJ, DeFronzo RA: Effect of pioglitazone on abdominal fat distribution and insulin sensitivity in type 2 diabetic patients. J Clin Endocrinol Metab87 :784 eC2791,2002

    Ruderman N, Parentki M: AMP kinase and malonyl-CoA: targets for therapy of the metabolic syndrome. Nature3 :340 eC351,2004

    Yang X, Pratley RE, Tokraks S, Bogardus C, Permana PA: Microarray profiling of skeletal muscle tissues from equally obese, non-diabetic insulin-sensitive and insulin-resistant Pima Indians. Diabetologia45 :1584 eC1593,2002

    Sreekumar R, Halvatsiotis P, Schimke JC, Nair KS: Gene expression profile in skeletal muscle of type 2 diabetes and the effect of insulin treatment. Diabetes51 :1913 eC1920,2002

    Patti ME, Butte AJ, Crunkhorn S, Cusi K, Berria R, Kashyap S, Miyazaki Y, Kohane I, Costello M, Saccone R, Landaker EJ, Goldfine AB, Mun E, DeFronzo R, Finlayson J, Kahn CR, Mandarino LJ: Coordinated reduction of genes of oxidative metabolism in humans with insulin resistance and diabetes: potential role of PGC1 and NRF1. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A100 :8466 eC8471,2003(Guenther Boden, Carol Hom)