胰岛素抵抗
mTORC1型
内分泌学
医学
内科学
胰岛素
2型糖尿病
2型糖尿病
肥胖
糖尿病
生物化学
生物
信号转导
PI3K/AKT/mTOR通路
作者
Christopher J. Lynch,Sean H. Adams
标识
DOI:10.1038/nrendo.2014.171
摘要
Branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) levels are increased in individuals with obesity and are associated with worse metabolic health and future insulin resistance. In this Review, Christopher Lynch and Sean Adams discuss whether and how impaired BCAA metabolism might occur in obesity and how perturbations in BCAA levels reflect the insulin resistant and type 2 diabetes mellitus pathophenotypes. Branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) are important nutrient signals that have direct and indirect effects. Frequently, BCAAs have been reported to mediate antiobesity effects, especially in rodent models. However, circulating levels of BCAAs tend to be increased in individuals with obesity and are associated with worse metabolic health and future insulin resistance or type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). A hypothesized mechanism linking increased levels of BCAAs and T2DM involves leucine-mediated activation of the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), which results in uncoupling of insulin signalling at an early stage. A BCAA dysmetabolism model proposes that the accumulation of mitotoxic metabolites (and not BCAAs per se) promotes β-cell mitochondrial dysfunction, stress signalling and apoptosis associated with T2DM. Alternatively, insulin resistance might promote aminoacidaemia by increasing the protein degradation that insulin normally suppresses, and/or by eliciting an impairment of efficient BCAA oxidative metabolism in some tissues. Whether and how impaired BCAA metabolism might occur in obesity is discussed in this Review. Research on the role of individual and model-dependent differences in BCAA metabolism is needed, as several genes (BCKDHA, PPM1K, IVD and KLF15) have been designated as candidate genes for obesity and/or T2DM in humans, and distinct phenotypes of tissue-specific branched chain ketoacid dehydrogenase complex activity have been detected in animal models of obesity and T2DM.
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