Abstract
BackgroundGhrelin is a gut hormone that spikes in circulation before mealtime. Recent findings suggest that both ghrelin isoforms stimulate skeletal muscle fatty acid oxidation, lending to the possibility that it may regulate skeletal muscle’s handling of meal-derived substrates. It was hypothesized in the current study that ghrelin may preserve muscle insulin response during conditions of elevated saturated fatty acid (palmitate) availability by promoting its oxidation. Methods and resultsSoleus muscle strips were isolated from male rats to determine the direct effects of ghrelin isoforms on fatty acid oxidation, glucose uptake and insulin signaling. We demonstrate that unacylated ghrelin (UnAG) is the more potent stimulator of skeletal muscle fatty acid oxidation. Both isoforms of ghrelin generally protected muscle from impaired insulin-mediated phosphorylation of AKT Ser473 and Thr308, as well as downstream phosphorylation of AS160 Ser588 during high palmitate exposure. However, only UnAG was able to preserve insulin-stimulated glucose uptake during exposure to high palmitate concentrations. The use of etomoxir, an irreversible inhibitor of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT-1) abolished this protection, strongly suggesting that UnAG’s stimulation of fatty acid oxidation may be essential to this protection. To our knowledge, we are also the first to investigate the impact of a chronic high-fat diet on ghrelin’s actions in muscle. Following 6 wks of a high-fat diet, UnAG was unable to preserve insulin-stimulated signaling or glucose transport during an acute high palmitate exposure. UnAG was also unable to further stimulate 5′ AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) or fatty acid oxidation during high palmitate exposure. Corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor-2 (CRF-2R) content was significantly decreased in muscle from high-fat fed animals, which may partially account for the loss of UnAG’s effects. ConclusionsUnAG is able to protect muscle from acute lipid exposure, likely due to its ability to stimulation fatty acid oxidation. This effect is lost in high-fat fed animals, implying a resistance to ghrelin at the level of the muscle. The underlying mechanisms accounting for ghrelin resistance in high fat-fed animals remain to be discovered.
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