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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The accumulation of intracellular triacylglycerol (TG) is highly correlated with muscle insulin resistance. However, it is controversial whether the accumulation of TG is the result of increased fatty acid supply, decreased fatty acid oxidation, or both. Because abnormal fatty acid metabolism is a key contributor to the pathogenesis of diabetes-related cardiovascular dysfunction, we examined fatty acid and glucose metabolism in hearts of insulin-resistant JCR:LA-cp rats. Isolated working hearts from insulin-resistant rats had glycolytic rates that were reduced to 50% of lean control levels (P < 0.05). Cardiac TG content was increased by 50% (P < 0.05) in the insulin-resistant rats, but palmitate oxidation rates remained similar between the insulin-resistant and lean control rats. However, plasma fatty acids and TG levels, as well as cardiac fatty acid-binding protein (FABP) expression, were significantly increased in the insulin-resistant rats. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays a major role in the regulation of cardiac fatty acid and glucose metabolism. When activated, AMPK increases fatty acid oxidation by inhibiting acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) and reducing malonyl-CoA levels, and it decreases TG content by inhibiting glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (GPAT), the rate-limiting step in TG synthesis. The activation of AMPK also stimulates cardiac glucose uptake and glycolysis. We thus investigated whether a decrease in AMPK activity was responsible for the reduced cardiac glycolysis and increased TG content in the insulin-resistant rats. However, we found no significant difference in AMPK activity. We also found no significant difference in various established downstream targets of AMPK: ACC activity, malonyl-CoA levels, carnitine palmitoyltransferase I activity, or GPAT activity. We conclude that hearts from insulin-resistant JCR:LA-cp rats accumulate substantial TG as a result of increased fatty acid supply rather than from reduced fatty acid oxidation. Furthermore, the accumulation of cardiac TG is associated with a reduction in insulin-stimulated glucose metabolism.
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PMID:Potential mechanisms and consequences of cardiac triacylglycerol accumulation in insulin-resistant rats. 1246 81

Beta-cells possess inherent mechanisms to adapt to overnutrition and the prevailing concentrations of glucose, fatty acids, and other fuels to maintain glucose homeostasis. However, this is balanced by potentially harmful actions of the same nutrients. Both glucose and fatty acids may cause good/adaptive or evil/toxic actions on the beta-cell, depending on their concentrations and the time during which they are elevated. Chronic high glucose dramatically influences beta-cell lipid metabolism via substrate availability, changes in the activity and expression of enzymes of glucose and lipid metabolism, and modifications in the expression level of key transcription factors. We discuss here the emerging view that beta-cell "glucotoxicity" is in part indirectly caused by "lipotoxicity," and that beta-cell abnormalities will become particularly apparent when both glucose and circulating fatty acids are high. We support the concept that elevated glucose and fatty acids synergize in causing toxicity in islets and other organs, a process that may be instrumental in the pleiotropic defects associated with the metabolic syndrome and type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The mechanisms by which hyperglycemia and hyperlipidemia alter insulin secretion are discussed and a model of beta-cell "glucolipotoxicity" that implicates alterations in beta-cell malonyl-CoA concentrations; peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha and -gamma and sterol regulatory element binding protein-1c expression; and lipid partitioning is proposed.
Diabetes 2002 Dec
PMID:Malonyl-CoA signaling, lipid partitioning, and glucolipotoxicity: role in beta-cell adaptation and failure in the etiology of diabetes. 1247 83

The mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) catalyses the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate, and links glycolysis to the tricarboxylic acid cycle and ATP production. Adequate flux through PDC is important in tissues with a high ATP requirement, in lipogenic tissues (since it provides cytosolic acetyl-CoA for fatty acid (FA) synthesis), and in generating cytosolic malonyl-CoA, a potent inhibitor of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT I). Conversely, suppression of PDC activity is crucial for glucose conservation when glucose is scarce. This review describes recent advances relating to the control of mammalian PDC activity by phosphorylation (inactivation) and dephosphorylation (activation, reactivation), in particular regulation of PDC by pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK) which phosphorylates and inactivates PDC. PDK activity is that of a family of four proteins (PDK1-4). PDK2 and PDK4 appear to be expressed in most major tissues and organs of the body, PDK1 appears to be limited to the heart and pancreatic islets, and PDK3 is limited to the kidney, brain and testis. PDK4 is selectively upregulated in the longer term in most tissues and organs in response to starvation and hormonal imbalances such as insulin resistance, diabetes mellitus and hyperthyroidism. Parallel increases in PDK2 and PDK4 expression appear to be restricted to gluconceogenesic tissues, liver and kidney, which take up as well as generate pyruvate. Factors that regulate PDK4 expression include FA oxidation and adequate insulin action. PDK4 is also either a direct or indirect target of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) alpha. PPAR alpha deficiency in liver and kidney restricts starvation-induced upregulation of PDK4; however, the role of PPAR alpha in heart and skeletal muscle appears to be more complex. These observations may have important implications for the pharmacological modulation of PDK activity (e.g. use of PPAR alpha activators) for the control of whole-body glucose, lipid and lactate homeostasis in disease states and suggest that therapeutic interventions must be tissue targeted so that whole-body fuel homeostasis is not adversely perturbed.
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PMID:Therapeutic potential of the mammalian pyruvate dehydrogenase kinases in the prevention of hyperglycaemia. 1247 89

It has been established that leptin exerts a negative control on food intake, allowing one to maintain stable caloric intake over time. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether leptin regulates food intake when a supply of calories is provided by the systemic route. Experiments were carried out in leptin receptor-deficient obese fa/fa rats and lean Fa/fa controls. In both groups, 48 h of glucose infusion reduced food intake in proportion to caloric supply, resulting in virtually no change in total caloric intake as compared to before the infusion. This hypophagic response was reproduced without adding systemic calories, but by increasing glucose and insulin concentrations specifically in the brain through carotid artery infusion. Concomitant intracerebroventricular administration of 5-(tetradecyloxy)-2-furoic acid, an acetyl CoA carboxylase inhibitor that precludes malonyl-CoA synthesis, abolished the restriction of feeding in carotid-infused lean and obese rats. These data indicate that a supply of calories via glucose infusion induces a hypophagic response independent of leptin signaling in the rat, and support the hypothesis that a rise in central malonyl-CoA, triggered by increased glucose and insulin concentrations, participates in this adaptation. This process could contribute to the limiting of hyperphagia, primarily when leptin signaling is altered, as in the obese state.
Diabetes 2003 Feb
PMID:Leptin receptor-deficient obese Zucker rats reduce their food intake in response to a systemic supply of calories from glucose. 1254 May 97

Increases in glucose or fatty acids affect metabolism via changes in long-chain acyl-CoA formation and chronically elevated fatty acids increase total cellular CoA. Understanding the response of pancreatic beta cells to increased amounts of fuel and the role that altered insulin secretion plays in the development and maintenance of obesity and Type 2 diabetes is important. Data indicate that the activated form of fatty acids acts as an effector molecule in stimulus-secretion coupling. Glucose increases cytosolic long-chain acyl-CoA because it increases the "switch" compound malonyl-CoA that blocks mitochondrial beta-oxidation, thus implementing a shift from fatty acid to glucose oxidation. We present arguments in support of the following: (i) A source of fatty acid either exogenous or endogenous (derived by lipolysis of triglyceride) is necessary to support normal insulin secretion; (ii) a rapid increase of fatty acids potentiates glucose-stimulated secretion by increasing fatty acyl-CoA or complex lipid concentrations that act distally by modulating key enzymes such as protein kinase C or the exocytotic machinery; (iii) a chronic increase of fatty acids enhances basal secretion by the same mechanism, but promotes obesity and a diminished response to stimulatory glucose; (iv) agents which raise cAMP act as incretins, at least in part, by stimulating lipolysis via beta-cell hormone-sensitive lipase activation. Furthermore, increased triglyceride stores can give higher rates of lipolysis and thus influence both basal and stimulated insulin secretion. These points highlight the important roles of NEFA, LC-CoA, and their esterified derivatives in affecting insulin secretion in both normal and pathological states.
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PMID:Fatty acid metabolism and insulin secretion in pancreatic beta cells. 1368 Jan 27

Insulin resistance in skeletal muscle is present in humans with type 2 diabetes (noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus) and obesity and in rodents with these disorders. Malonyl CoA is a regulator of carnitine palmitoyl transferase I (CPT I), the enzyme that controls the transfer of long chain fatty acyl CoA into mitochondria where it is oxidized. In rat skeletal muscle, the formation of malonyl CoA is regulated acutely (in minutes) by changes in the activity of acetyl CoA carboxylase (ACC), the enzyme that catalyzes malonyl CoA synthesis. ACC activity can be regulated by changes in the concentration of citrate which is both an allosteric activator of ACC and a source of its precursor, cytosolic acetyl CoA. Increases in cytosolic citrate leading to an increase in the concentration of malonyl CoA occur when muscle is presented with insulin and glucose, or when it is made inactive by denervation. In contrast, exercise lowers the concentration of malonyl CoA, by activating an AMP activated protein kinase (AMPK), which phosphorylates and inhibits ACC. Recently we have shown that the activity of malonyl CoA decarboxylase (MCD), an enzyme that degrades malonyl CoA, is also regulated by phosphorylation. The concentration of malonyl CoA in liver and muscle in certain circumstances correlates inversely with changes in MCD activity. This review will describe the current literature on the regulation of malonyl CoA/AMPK mechanism and its physiological function.
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PMID:Malonyl-CoA and AMP-activated protein kinase: an expanding partnership. 1461 57

Bacterial aromatic polyketides such as tetracycline and doxorubicin are a medicinally important class of natural products produced as secondary metabolites by actinomyces bacteria. Their backbones are derived from malonyl-CoA units by polyketide synthases (PKSs). The nascent polyketide chain is synthesized by the minimal PKS, a module consisting of four dissociated enzymes. Although the biosynthesis of most aromatic polyketide backbones is initiated through decarboxylation of a malonyl building block (which results in an acetate group), some polyketides, such as the estrogen receptor antagonist R1128, are derived from nonacetate primers. Understanding the mechanism of nonacetate priming can lead to biosynthesis of novel polyketides that have improved pharmacological properties. Recent biochemical analysis has shown that nonacetate priming is the result of stepwise activity of two dissociated PKS modules with orthogonal molecular recognition features. In these PKSs, an initiation module that synthesizes a starter unit is present in addition to the minimal PKS module. Here we describe a general method for the engineered biosynthesis of regioselectively modified aromatic polyketides. When coexpressed with the R1128 initiation module, the actinorhodin minimal PKS produced novel hexaketides with propionyl and isobutyryl primer units. Analogous octaketides could be synthesized by combining the tetracenomycin minimal PKS with the R1128 initiation module. Tailoring enzymes such as ketoreductases and cyclases were able to process the unnatural polyketides efficiently. Based upon these findings, hybrid PKSs were engineered to synthesize new anthraquinone antibiotics with predictable functional group modifications. Our results demonstrate that (i) bimodular aromatic PKSs present a general mechanism for priming aromatic polyketide backbones with nonacetate precursors; (ii) the minimal PKS controls polyketide chain length by counting the number of atoms incorporated into the backbone rather than the number of elongation cycles; and (iii) in contrast, auxiliary PKS enzymes such as ketoreductases, aromatases, and cyclases recognize specific functional groups in the backbone rather than overall chain length. Among the anthracyclines engineered in this study were compounds with (i) more superior activity than R1128 against the breast cancer cell line MCF-7 and (ii) inhibitory activity against glucose-6-phosphate translocase, an attractive target for the treatment of Type II diabetes.
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PMID:Engineered biosynthesis of regioselectively modified aromatic polyketides using bimodular polyketide synthases. 1496 33

The malonyl-CoA/long-chain acyl-CoA (LC-CoA) model of glucose-induced insulin secretion (GIIS) predicts that malonyl-CoA derived from glucose metabolism inhibits fatty acid oxidation, thereby increasing the availability of LC-CoA for lipid signaling to cellular processes involved in exocytosis. For directly testing the model, INSr3 cell clones overexpressing malonyl-CoA decarboxylase in the cytosol (MCDc) in a tetracycline regulatable manner were generated, and INS(832/13) and rat islets were infected with MCDc-expressing adenoviruses. MCD activity was increased more than fivefold, and the malonyl-CoA content was markedly diminished. This was associated with enhanced fat oxidation at high glucose, a suppression of the glucose-induced increase in cellular free fatty acid (FFA) content, and reduced partitioning at elevated glucose of exogenous palmitate into lipid esterification products. MCDc overexpression, in the presence of exogenous FFAs but not in their absence, reduced GIIS in all beta-cell lines and in rat islets. It also markedly curtailed the stimulation of insulin secretion by other fuel and nonfuel secretagogues. In the absence of MCDc overexpression, the secretory responses to all types of secretagogues were amplified by the provision of exogenous fatty acids. In the presence of exogenous FFAs, the fatty acyl-CoA synthetase inhibitor triacsin C reduced secretion in response to glucose and nonfuel stimuli. The data show the existence of important links between the metabolic coupling factor malonyl-CoA, the partitioning of fatty acids, and the stimulation of insulin secretion to both fuel and nonfuel stimuli.
Diabetes 2004 Apr
PMID:A role for the malonyl-CoA/long-chain acyl-CoA pathway of lipid signaling in the regulation of insulin secretion in response to both fuel and nonfuel stimuli. 1504 16

Cells contain limited and sequestered pools of Coenzyme A (CoA) that are essential for activating carboxylate metabolites. Some acyl-CoA esters have high metabolic and signalling impact, so control of CoA ester concentrations is important. This and transfer of the activated acyl moieties between cell compartments without wasting energy on futile cycles of hydrolysis and resynthesis is achieved through the carnitine system. The location, properties of and deficiencies in the carnitine acyltransferases are described in relation to their influence on the CoA pools in the cell and, hence, on metabolism. The protection of free CoA pools in disease states is achieved by excretion of acyl-carnitine so that carnitine supplementation is required where unwanted acyl groups build up, such as in some inherited disorders of fatty acid oxidation. Acetyl-carnitine improves cognition in the brain and propionyl-carnitine improves cardiac performance in heart disease and diabetes. The therapeutic effects of carnitine and its esters are discussed in relation to the integrative influence of the carnitine system across CoA pools. Recent evidence for sequestered pools of activated acetate for synthesis of malonyl-CoA, for the synthesis of polyunsaturated fatty acids and for the inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 to regulate fatty acid oxidation is reviewed.
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PMID:Carnitine acyltransferases and their influence on CoA pools in health and disease. 1536 37

Carnitine status in humans is reported to vary according to body composition, gender, and diet. Plasma carnitine concentration positively correlates with the dietary intake of carnitine. The content of carnitine in foodstuff is based on old and inadequate methodology. Nevertheless, dietary carnitine is important. The molecular biology of the enzymes of carnitine biosynthesis has recently been accomplished. Carnitine biosynthesis requires pathways in different tissues and is an efficient system. Overall biosynthesis is determined by the availability of trimethyllysine from tissue proteins. Carnitine deficiency resulting from a defect in biosynthesis has yet to be reported. The role of carnitine in long-chain fatty acid oxidation is well defined. Recent evidence supports a role for the voltage-dependent anion channel in the transport of acyl-CoAs through the mitochondrial outer membrane. The mitochondrial outer membrane carnitine palmitoyltransferase-I in liver can be phosphorylated and when phosphorylated the sensitivity to malonyl-CoA is greatly decreased. This may explain the change in sensitivity of liver carnitine palmitoyltransferase-I observed during fasting and diabetes. Recently reported data clarify the role of carnitine and the carnitine transport system in the interplay between peroxisomes and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation. Lastly, the buffering of the acyl-CoA/CoA coupled by carnitine reflects intracellular metabolism. This mass action effect underlies the use of carnitine as a therapeutic agent. In summary, these new observations help to further our understanding of the molecular aspects of carnitine in medicine.
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PMID:Carnitine: a nutritional, biosynthetic, and functional perspective. 1536 36


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