Abstract

In order to evaluate the relationship between tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) level in muscle and metabolic abnormalities in obesity and diabetes mellitus, pioglitazone, a novel insulin-sensitizing agent, was administered to Wistar fatty rats and time-dependent changes in muscle TNF-alpha content and plasma indicators of diabetes and obesity were measured. Wistar fatty rats were hyperglycaemic, hyperlipidaemic and hyperinsulinaemic, and their plasma and muscle TNF-alpha levels were two or more times higher than those in normal lean rats at 16 weeks of age. When pioglitazone was administered to fatty rats at a dose of 3 mg kg(-1) day(-1), the plasma triglyceride level and TNF-alpha levels in plasma and muscle decreased time-dependently, and reached the levels of lean rats within 4 days. Plasma glucose and insulin levels also decreased time-dependently with pioglitazone, but on day 4, these levels were still much higher than the levels in lean rats. Neutral sphingomyelinase (SMase) activity in muscle of fatty rats was two times higher than that in lean rats and was lowered to the level of that in lean rats by 4 days' pioglitazone administration. The plasma leptin level in fatty rats was 8 times higher than that in lean rats, but pioglitazone did not affect the level during the 4-day administration period. These results suggest that an increase in TNF-alpha production and subsequent activation of SMase in muscle leads to metabolic abnormalities in obesity and diabetes and that antidiabetic activity of pioglitazone is deeply associated with the suppression of TNF-alpha production.

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