4.7 Article

FGF21 Response to Critical Illness: Effect of Blood Glucose Control and Relation With Cellular Stress and Survival

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 100, Issue 10, Pages E1319-E1327

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/jc.2015-2700

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO), Belgium [G.0848.15]
  2. Methusalem program - Flemish Government [METH08/07, METH14/06]
  3. University of Leuven
  4. European Research Council Advanced Grant from the Ideas Programme of the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for Research (EU FP7) [AdvG-2012-321670]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Context: Critical illness is hallmarked by mitochondrial damage, which is attenuated by targeting normoglycemia. Mitochondrial dysfunction induces fibroblast growth factor-21 (FGF21) via the integrated stress response (ISR). Objective: We evaluated whether critical illness elevates serum FGF21 concentrations and whether targeting normoglycemia (80-110 mg/dL) with insulin vs tolerating hyperglycemia may lower serum FGF21 by attenuating mitochondrial dysfunction and the ISR. Setting/Design: We quantified serum FGF21 concentrations in critically ill patients. To allow tissue analyses, including hepatic fgf21 expression in relation with mitochondrial function and ISR markers, we studied critically ill rabbits. Patients and rabbits were randomized to hyper- or normoglycemia. Patients/Other Participants: We studied 405 fed critically ill patients vs 20 matched non-critically ill control subjects as well as 26 critically ill rabbits vs 13 healthy rabbits. Interventions: Insulin was infused to control blood glucose. Main Outcome Measures and Results: Serum FGF21 concentrations upon intensive care unit admission were 8-fold higher than in control subjects (P < .0001), decreased with time, but always remained higher in nonsurvivors than survivors (P <= .006). Maintaining normoglycemia lowered serum FGF21 (P = .01), statistically explaining at least part of its mortality benefit. In ill rabbits, hepatic fgf21 expression was substantially increased (P < .0001) and was tightly correlated with mitochondrial dysfunction (all R-2 >= 0.49; all P <= .0006 for complex I and V) and ISR markers on day 3 (R-2 >= 0.73; P <= .0001), all lowered by targeting normoglycemia. Conclusion: Critical illness is a potent inducer of serum FGF21 and of liver fgf21 expression, possibly driven at least in part by mitochondrial damage and the ISR, which were all attenuated by targeting normoglycemia.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available