高血糖挑战与肥胖狒狒脂肪组织的分布

Tanmay Kulkarni, Gymama Slaughter, Chimdi Ego-Osuala, Peter Kochunov, Raul A Bastarrachea, Vicki Mattern, Marcia Andrade, Paul B Higgins, Anthony G Comuzzie, V Saroja Voruganti
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摘要

背景:血糖水平调节胰岛素的分泌速度,而胰岛素是人体防止血糖过度升高的机制。糖代谢受损和胰岛素抵抗与体内脂肪过多有关。在这里,我们对大型非人灵长类动物狒狒的腹部肌肉和腹部脂肪组织进行了量化,并研究了它们与血清葡萄糖对高血糖挑战反应的关系:方法:五只雌性狒狒在 90 分钟身体成像实验前禁食 16 小时,实验包括 20 分钟基线,然后注入葡萄糖(500 毫克/千克)。每隔一段时间对血糖进行采样。测量了肌肉、内脏和皮下脂肪组织的总体积:我们发现,脂肪组织的组成可预测非人灵长类动物对高血糖挑战的血糖反应波动。内脏脂肪含量较高的动物对葡萄糖的清除率明显降低。葡萄糖反应与体重、内脏脂肪和肌肉脂肪呈正相关(p < 0.005)。多项式回归分析表明,体重、内脏和肌肉具有显著的相关性:这些结果揭示了人类与狒狒在葡萄糖代谢方面的相似性,加强了狒狒在生物医学研究中的实用性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Hyperglycemic Challenge and Distribution of Adipose Tissue in Obese Baboons.

Background: Blood glucose levels regulate the rate of insulin secretion, which is the body's mechanism for preventing excessive elevation in blood glucose. Impaired glucose metabolism and insulin resistance have been linked to excess body fat composition. Here, we quantify abdominal muscle and abdominal adipose tissue compartments in a large nonhuman primate, the baboon, and investigate their relationship with serum glucose response to a hyperglycemic challenge.

Methods: Five female baboons were fasted for 16 hours prior to 90 minute body imaging experiment that consisted of a 20-min baseline, followed by a bolus infusion of glucose (500mg/kg). The blood glucose was sampled at regular intervals. The total volumes of the muscle, visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissue were measured.

Results and discussion: We found that adipose tissue composition predicted fluctuations in glucose responses to a hyperglycemic challenge of a non-human primate. Animals with higher visceral adiposity showed significantly reduced glucose elimination. The glucose responses were positively correlated with body weight, visceral and muscle fat (p < 0.005). Polynomial regression analysis showed that body weight, visceral and muscle were significant.

Conclusions: These results reveal the similarity between humans and baboons with respect to glucose metabolism and strengthen the utility of baboon for biomedical research.

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