Affiliation:
1. Institute of Management Studies Ghaziabad (University Courses Campus) School of Biosciences Ghaziabad India
2. Insight BioSolutions - Rennes France
3. Dibrugarh University centre for biotechnology and bioinformatics Dibrugarh India
Abstract
Abstract::
The Central nervous system (CNS) is the prime regulator of signaling pathways
whose function includes regulation of food intake (consumption), energy expenditure, and other
metabolic responses like glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, fatty acid oxidation, and thermogenesis
that have been implicated in chronic inflammatory disorders. Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM)
and obesity are two metabolic disorders that are linked together and have become an epidemic
worldwide, thus raising significant public health concerns. Fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21)
is an endocrine hormone with pleiotropic metabolic effects that increase insulin sensitivity and
energy expenditure by elevating thermogenesis in brown or beige adipocytes, thus reducing
body weight and sugar intake. In contrast, during starvation conditions, FGF21 induces its expression
in the liver to initiate glucose homeostasis. Insulin resistance is one of the main anomalies
caused by impaired FGF21 signaling, which also causes abnormal regulation of other signaling
pathways. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), the cytokine released by adipocytes and inflammatory
cells in response to chronic inflammation, is regarded major factor that reduces the
expression of FGF21 and modulates underlying insulin resistance that causes imbalanced glucose
homeostasis. This review aims to shed light on the mechanisms underlying the development
of insulin resistance in obese individuals as well as the fundamental flaw in type 2 diabetes,
which is malfunctioning obese adipose tissue.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.