Circulating sDPP-4 is Increased in Obesity and Insulin Resistance but Is Not Related to Systemic Metabolic Inflammation
Author(s) -
Nathalie Rohmann,
Kristina Schlicht,
Corinna Geisler,
Tim Hollstein,
Carina Knappe,
Laura Krause,
Stefanie Hagen,
Alexia Beckmann,
Anna Katharina Seoudy,
Felix Braun,
Katharina Hartmann,
Dominik M. Schulte,
Kathrin Türk,
Jan Beckmann,
Witigo von Schönfels,
Franziska A. Hägele,
Anja BosyWestphal,
André Franke,
Stefan Schreiber,
Matthias Laudes
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1945-7197
pISSN - 0021-972X
DOI - 10.1210/clinem/dgaa758
Subject(s) - insulin resistance , medicine , systemic inflammation , endocrinology , adipokine , obesity , inflammation , diabetes mellitus , context (archaeology) , type 2 diabetes , biology , paleontology
Context Dipeptidylpeptidase (DPP)-4 is a key regulator of the incretin system. It exists in a membrane-bound form and a soluble form (sDPP-4). Initial human studies suggested sDPP-4 to be an adipokine involved in metabolic inflammation. However, recent mechanistic data in genetically modified mice has questioned these findings. Objectives We examined circulating sDPP-4 in a cohort of n = 451 humans with different metabolic phenotypes and during 3 different weight loss interventions (n = 101) to further clarify its role in human physiology and metabolic diseases. Design sDPP-4 serum concentrations were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and related to several phenotyping data including gut microbiome analysis. Results sDPP-4 increased with age and body weight and was positively associated with insulin resistance and hypertriglyceridemia but was reduced in manifest type 2 diabetes. In addition, we found reduced serum concentrations of sDPP-4 in subjects with arterial hypertension. In contrast to earlier reports, we did not identify an association with systemic markers of inflammation. Impaired kidney and liver functions significantly altered sDPP-4 concentrations while no relation to biomarkers for heart failure was observed. Having found increased levels of sDPP-4 in obesity, we studied surgical (gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy) and nonsurgical interventions, revealing a significant association of sDPP-4 with improvement of liver function tests but not with changes in body weight. Conclusions Our data suggest that sDPP-4 is related to hepatic abnormalities in obesity rather than primarily functioning as an adipokine and that sDPP-4 is implicated both in glucose and in lipid metabolism, but not fundamentally in systemic inflammation.
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