4.6 Article

Nonacute effects of H-FABP deficiency on skeletal muscle glucose uptake in vitro

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00139.2004

Keywords

heart-type fatty acid-binding protein; insulin; insulin resistance

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [R01 DK080756, U24-DK-59635] Funding Source: Medline

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Heart-type fatty acid-binding protein (H-FABP) is required for high rates of skeletal muscle long-chain fatty acid (LCFA) oxidation and esterification. Here we assessed whether H-FABP affects soleus muscle glucose uptake when measured in vitro in the absence of LCFA. Wild-type and H-FABP null mice were fed a standard chow or high-fat diet before muscle isolation. With the chow, the mutation increased insulin-dependent deoxyglucose uptake by 141% ( P < 0.01) at 0.02 mU/ml of insulin but did not cause a significant effect at 2 mU/ml of insulin; skeletal muscle triglyceride and long-chain acyl-CoA (LCA-CoA) levels remained normal. With the high-fat diet, the mutation increased insulin-dependent deoxyglucose uptake by 190% ( P < 0.01) at 2 mU/ml of insulin, thus partially preventing insulin resistance, and it completely prevented the threefold ( P < 0.001) diet-induced increase of muscle triglyceride levels; however, muscle LCA-CoA levels showed little or no reduction. With both diets, the mutation reduced the basal ( insulin-independent) soleus muscle deoxyglucose uptake by 28% ( P < 0.05). These results establish a close relation between FABP-dependent lipid pools and insulin sensitivity and indicate the existence of a nonacute, antagonistic, and H-FABP-dependent fatty acid regulation of basal and insulin-dependent muscle glucose uptake.

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