Abstract

AimInsulin-resistant skeletal muscle is characterized by metabolic inflexibility with associated alterations in substrate selection, mediated by peroxisome-proliferator activated receptor δ (PPARδ). Although it is established that PPARδ contributes to the alteration of energy metabolism, it is not clear whether it plays a role in mitochondrial fuel competition. While nutrient overload may impair metabolic flexibility by fuel congestion within mitochondria, in absence of obesity defects at a mitochondrial level have not yet been excluded. We sought to determine whether reduced PPARδ content in insulin-resistant rat skeletal muscle of a non-obese rat model of T2DM (Goto-Kakizaki, GK) ameliorate the inhibitory effect of fatty acid (i.e., palmitoylcarnitine) on mitochondrial carbohydrate oxidization (i.e., pyruvate) in muscle fibers.MethodsBioenergetic function was characterized in oxidative soleus (S) and glycolytic white gastrocnemius (WG) muscles with measurement of respiration rates in permeabilized fibers in the presence of complex I, II, IV, and fatty acid substrates. Mitochondrial content was measured by citrate synthase (CS) and succinate dehydrogenase activity (SDH). Western blot was used to determine protein expression of PPARδ, PDK isoform 2 and 4.ResultsCS and SDH activity, key markers of mitochondrial content, were reduced by ∼10–30% in diabetic vs. control, and the effect was evident in both oxidative and glycolytic muscles. PPARδ (p < 0.01), PDK2 (p < 0.01), and PDK4 (p = 0.06) protein content was reduced in GK animals compared to Wistar rats (N = 6 per group). Ex vivo respiration rates in permeabilized muscle fibers determined in the presence of complex I, II, IV, and fatty acid substrates, suggested unaltered mitochondrial bioenergetic function in T2DM muscle. Respiration in the presence of pyruvate was higher compared to palmitoylcarnitine in both animal groups and fiber types. Moreover, respiration rates in the presence of both palmitoylcarnitine and pyruvate were reduced by 25 ± 6% (S), 37 ± 6% (WG) and 63 ± 6% (S), 57 ± 8% (WG) compared to pyruvate for both controls and GK, respectively. The inhibitory effect of palmitoylcarnitine on respiration was significantly greater in GK than controls (p < 10–3).ConclusionWith competing fuels, the presence of fatty acids diminishes mitochondria ability to utilize carbohydrate derived substrates in insulin-resistant muscle despite reduced PPARδ content.

Highlights

  • Skeletal muscle insulin resistance is a primary defect in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM)

  • The GK rat represents a spontaneous non-obese model of T2DM, with insulin-resistance primarily manifesting in skeletal muscle, and was used to evaluate competing fuel selection in the absence of lipid accumulation in oxidative and glycolytic skeletal muscle fibers

  • Mitochondrial content in both muscle groups was significantly less in GK than in control muscles, whereas similar respiration rates with complex I, II, IV, and fatty acid substrates for both S and white gastrocnemius (WG) muscle fibers indicate that mitochondrial function is preserved in the presence of insulin resistance

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Summary

Introduction

Skeletal muscle insulin resistance is a primary defect in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). The loss of metabolic flexibility, defined as the capacity to adapt fuel (carbohydrate and fat) utilization to fuel availability (Kelley and Mandarino, 2000), is a hallmark of insulin resistance and T2DM. It has been suggested that nutrient overload may impair metabolic flexibility due to fuel congestion within mitochondria (Muoio, 2014), defects at a mitochondrial level have not yet been excluded. Mitochondrial fuel competition experiments can help to clarify whether metabolic inflexibility factors are present within mitochondria. An altered response to fuel competition in healthy vs diabetic muscle mitochondria, in the absence of nutrient overload, could indicate the presence of intrinsic factors influencing metabolic flexibility

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