Abstract

Reverse causality has made it difficult to establish the causal directions between obesity and prediabetes and obesity and insulin resistance. To disentangle whether obesity causally drives prediabetes and insulin resistance already in non-diabetic individuals, we utilized the UK Biobank and METSIM cohort to perform a Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses in the non-diabetic individuals. Our results suggest that both prediabetes and systemic insulin resistance are caused by obesity (p = 1.2×10-3 and p = 3.1×10-24). As obesity reflects the amount of body fat, we next studied how adipose tissue affects insulin resistance. We performed both bulk RNA-sequencing and single nucleus RNA sequencing on frozen human subcutaneous adipose biopsies to assess adipose cell-type heterogeneity and mitochondrial (MT) gene expression in insulin resistance. We discovered that the adipose MT gene expression and body fat percent are both independently associated with insulin resistance (p≤0.05 for each) when adjusting for the decomposed adipose cell-type proportions. Next, we showed that these 3 factors, adipose MT gene expression, body fat percent, and adipose cell types, explain a substantial amount (44.39%) of variance in insulin resistance and can be used to predict it (p≤2.64×10-5 in 3 independent human cohorts). In summary, we demonstrated that obesity is a strong determinant of both prediabetes and insulin resistance, and discovered that individuals' adipose cell-type composition, adipose MT gene expression, and body fat percent predict their insulin resistance, emphasizing the critical role of adipose tissue in systemic insulin resistance.

Highlights

  • The global obesity epidemic is driving the concomitant rapid increase in the prevalence of cardiometabolic disorders, including type 2 diabetes (T2D) [1,2]

  • Previous studies have shown that obesity has a causal effect on T2D; it remains unknown whether obesity causes prediabetes and insulin resistance already in non-diabetic individuals

  • By utilizing almost half a million individuals from the UK Biobank and the Finnish METabolic Syndrome In Men (METSIM) cohort, we identified a significant causal effect of obesity on prediabetes and insulin resistance among the non-diabetic individuals

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Summary

Introduction

The global obesity epidemic is driving the concomitant rapid increase in the prevalence of cardiometabolic disorders, including type 2 diabetes (T2D) [1,2]. The direction of the causal effect between obesity and insulin resistance remains elusive in humans [18,19]. Direct evidence of obesity causing systemic insulin resistance in humans is still lacking. To this end, we performed a Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis using the genotype and metabolic traits of unrelated non-diabetic individuals from both UK Biobank (UKB) [20] and the Finnish METabolic Syndrome In Men (METSIM) cohort [21]. This report suggests for the first time using MR that obesity (i.e. body fat percent) is causally related with both prediabetes and insulin resistance in non-diabetic humans

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