Lipid Mixtures Containing a Very High Proportion of Saturated Fatty Acids Only Modestly Impair Insulin Signaling in Cultured Muscle Cells
Author(s) -
Sean A. Newsom,
Allison C. Everett,
Sanghee Park,
Douglas W. Van Pelt,
Alexander Hinko,
Jeffrey F. Horowitz
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0120871
Subject(s) - fatty acid , diacylglycerol kinase , free fatty acid receptor 1 , saturated fatty acid , biochemistry , insulin , insulin receptor , polyunsaturated fatty acid , skeletal muscle , chemistry , medicine , biology , endocrinology , insulin resistance , signal transduction , receptor , protein kinase c , agonist
In vitro examinations of the effect of saturated fatty acids on skeletal muscle insulin action often use only one or two different fatty acid species, which does not resemble the human plasma fatty acid profile. We compared graded concentrations (0.1-0.8mM) of 3 different lipid mixtures: 1) a physiologic fatty acid mixture (NORM; 40% saturated fatty acids), 2) a physiologic mixture high in saturated fatty acids (HSFA; 60% saturated fatty acids), and 3) 100% palmitate (PALM) on insulin signaling and fatty acid partitioning into triacylglycerol (TAG) and diacylglycerol (DAG) in cultured muscle cells. As expected, PALM readily impaired insulin-stimulated pAkt Thr308 /Akt and markedly increased intracellular DAG content. In contrast, the fatty acid mixtures only modestly impaired insulin-stimulated pAkt Thr308M /Akt, and we found no differences between NORM and HSFA. Importantly, NORM and HSFA did not increase DAG content, but instead dose-dependently increased TAG accumulation. Therefore, the robust impairment in insulin signaling found with palmitate exposure was attenuated with physiologic mixtures of fatty acids, even with a very high proportion of saturated fatty acids. This may be explained in part by selective partitioning of fatty acids into neutral lipid (i.e., TAG) when muscle cells were exposed to physiologic lipid mixtures.
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