Effects of chronic hyperinsulinemia on metabolic pathways and insulin signaling in the fetal liver

慢性高胰岛素血症对胎儿肝脏代谢途径和胰岛素信号的影响

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作者:Paul J Rozance, Amanda K Jones, Stephanie L Bourque, Angelo D'Alessandro, William W Hay Jr, Laura D Brown, Stephanie R Wesolowski

Abstract

The effect of chronic of hyperinsulinemia in the fetal liver is poorly understood. Here, we produced hyperinsulinemia with euglycemia for ∼8 days in fetal sheep [hyperinsulinemic (INS)] at 0.9 gestation. INS fetuses had increased insulin and decreased oxygen and amino acid (AA) concentrations compared with saline-infused fetuses [control (CON)]. Glucose (whole body) utilization rates were increased, as expected, in INS fetuses. In the liver, however, there were few differences in genes and metabolites related to glucose and lipid metabolism and no activation of insulin signaling proteins (Akt and mTOR). There was increased p-AMPK activation and decreased mitochondrial mass (PGC1A expression, mitochondrial DNA content) in INS livers. Using an unbiased multivariate analysis with 162 metabolites, we identified effects on AA and one-carbon metabolism in the INS liver. Expression of the transaminase BCAT2 and glutaminase genes GLS1 and GLS2 was decreased, supporting decreased AA utilization. We further evaluated the roles of hyperinsulinemia and hypoxemia, both present in INS fetuses, on outcomes in the liver. Expression of PGC1A correlated only with hyperinsulinemia, p-AMPK correlated only with hypoxemia, and other genes and metabolites correlated with both hyperinsulinemia and hypoxemia. In fetal hepatocytes, acute treatment with insulin activated p-Akt and decreased PGC1A, whereas hypoxia activated p-AMPK. Overall, chronic hyperinsulinemia produced greater effects on amino acid metabolism compared with glucose and lipid metabolism and a novel effect on one-carbon metabolism in the fetal liver. These hepatic metabolic responses may result from the downregulation of insulin signaling and antagonistic effects of hypoxemia-induced AMPK activation that develop with chronic hyperinsulinemia.

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