Abstract

Skeletal muscle insulin resistance is an undesirable outcome during periods of physical inactivity in older adults, which can lead to a variety of metabolic diseases. Insulin sensitive tissue (e.g., liver, and skeletal muscle) derived ceramides are well known to promote insulin resistance. Evidence suggests that metformin can regulate tissue ceramide accumulation. Therefore, we hypothesized that metformin treatment during a short-term period of bed rest in male and female older adults would reduce skeletal muscle ceramide accumulation and prevent insulin resistance. Our study design consisted of older adults (66 ± 4.5 y/o placebo, n=10; 71.7 ± 5.1 y/o metformin, n=10) who were subjected to 5 days of bed rest. Participants were randomly assigned to placebo or metformin treatment groups. Drug or placebo treatments started two weeks prior to bed rest and continued throughout the 5 days of bed rest. Prior to and after bed rest, participants underwent a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp. Muscle biopsies (from the vastus lateralis) were taken prior to and after each clamp both before and after bed rest. We found that insulin-stimulated muscle ceramides were increased after bed rest but were blunted in older adults who took metformin. In addition, muscle insulin resistance correlated with the increase in ceramides. We conclude that metformin was effective to reduce ceramide accumulation in muscle during a period of bed rest in older adults. R21AG064576 awarded to M.J.D. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.

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