Abstract

Studies on human renal metabolism are scanty. Nowadays, functional imaging allows the characterization of renal metabolism in a noninvasive manner. We have recently demonstrated that fluorodeoxyglucose F18 (18F FDG) positron emission tomography can be used to analyze renal glucose uptake (GU) rates, and that the renal cortex is an insulin-sensitive tissue. To confirm that renal GU is decreased in people with obesity and to test whether circulating metabolites are related to renal GU. Eighteen people with obesity and 18 nonobese controls were studied with [18F]FDG positron emission tomography during insulin clamp. Renal scans were obtained ∼60 minutes after [18F]FDG injection. Renal GU was measured using fractional uptake rate and after correcting for residual intratubular [18F]FDG. Circulating metabolites were measured using high-throughput proton nuclear magnetic resonance metabolomics. Cortical GU was higher in healthy nonobese controls compared with people with obesity (4.7 [3.4-5.6] vs 3.1 [2.2-4.3], P = .004, respectively), and it associated positively with the degree of insulin sensitivity (M value) (r = 0.42, P = .01). Moreover, cortical GU was inversely associated with circulating β-OH-butyrate (r = -0.58, P = .009), acetoacetate (r = -0.48, P = .008), citrate (r = -0.44, P = .01), and free fatty acids (r = -0.68, P < .0001), even when accounting for the M value. On the contrary, medullary GU was not associated with any clinical parameters. These data confirm differences in renal cortical GU between people with obesity and healthy nonobese controls. Moreover, the negative correlations between renal cortex GU and free fatty acids, ketone bodies, and citrate are suggestive of substrate competition in the renal cortex.

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