4.6 Article

11β-HSD1 inhibition improves triglyceridemia through reduced liver VLDL secretion and partitions lipids toward oxidative tissues

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00276.2007

Keywords

11 beta-hsd1 inhibitor; glucocorticoids; diet-induced obesity; triglycerides; lipid metabolism; lipid partitioning; lipid oxidation

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Tissue-specific alterations in 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (HSD) type 1 activity, which amplifies glucocorticoid action, are thought to contribute to some of the metabolic complications of obesity. The present study tested whether hypertriglyceridemia is one such complication by investigating the effects of an 11 beta-HSD1 inhibitor (compound A, 3 mg center dot kg(-1)center dot day(-1), 21 days) on triglyceride (TG) metabolism in a rat model of diet-induced obesity. The dose of compound A used did not affect food intake or final body weight. Compound A improved fasting triglyceridemia (-42%) through a robust reduction (-41%) in hepatic TG secretion rate, without change in plasma TG clearance rate. Uptake of TG-derived fatty acids was, however, increased in oxidative tissues, including red gastrocnemius (+47%), heart (+39%), and brown adipose tissue (BAT, +46%) at the expense of the liver, with a concomitant increase in plasma membrane fatty acid-binding protein. Lipid oxidation products were increased in red gastrocnemius (+35%) and heart (+33%), as were levels of uncoupling protein 1 mRNA in BAT (+48%), and carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 activity tended to be increased in some oxidative tissues. These findings demonstrate that pharmacological inhibition of 11 beta-HSD1 at a dose that does not affect food intake improves triglyceridemia by reducing hepatic very low density lipoprotein-TG secretion, with a shift in the pattern of TG-derived fatty acid uptake toward oxidative tissues, in which lipid accumulation is prevented by increased lipid oxidation.

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