Regulation of adipose branched-chain amino acid catabolism enzyme expression and cross-adipose amino acid flux in human obesity

Author:

Lackey Denise E.1,Lynch Christopher J.2,Olson Kristine C.2,Mostaedi Rouzbeh3,Ali Mohamed3,Smith William H.3,Karpe Fredrik4,Humphreys Sandy4,Bedinger Daniel H.56,Dunn Tamara N.7,Thomas Anthony P.7,Oort Pieter J.1,Kieffer Dorothy A.7,Amin Rajesh8,Bettaieb Ahmed7,Haj Fawaz G.7,Permana Paska9,Anthony Tracy G.10,Adams Sean H.157

Affiliation:

1. Obesity & Metabolism Research Unit, United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service Western Human Nutrition Research Center, Davis, California;

2. Cellular & Molecular Physiology Department, The Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania;

3. Department of Surgery, University of California Davis School of Medicine, Davis, California;

4. Oxford Centre for Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Radcliffe Department of Medicine, University of Oxford and NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, Oxford University Hospitals Trust, Oxford, United Kingdom;

5. Molecular, Cellular & Integrative Physiology Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, Davis, California;

6. XOMA, Berkeley, California;

7. Graduate Group in Nutritional Biology & Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis, Davis, California;

8. Department of Pharmacal Sciences, Auburn State University, Auburn, Alabam;

9. Phoenix Veterans Affairs Health System, Phoenix, Arizona;

10. Department of Nutritional Sciences, Rutgers University, Rutgers, New Jersey

Abstract

Elevated blood branched-chain amino acids (BCAA) are often associated with insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes, which might result from a reduced cellular utilization and/or incomplete BCAA oxidation. White adipose tissue (WAT) has become appreciated as a potential player in whole body BCAA metabolism. We tested if expression of the mitochondrial BCAA oxidation checkpoint, branched-chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCKD) complex, is reduced in obese WAT and regulated by metabolic signals. WAT BCKD protein (E1α subunit) was significantly reduced by 35–50% in various obesity models ( fa/fa rats, db/db mice, diet-induced obese mice), and BCKD component transcripts significantly lower in subcutaneous (SC) adipocytes from obese vs. lean Pima Indians. Treatment of 3T3-L1 adipocytes or mice with peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ agonists increased WAT BCAA catabolism enzyme mRNAs, whereas the nonmetabolizable glucose analog 2-deoxy-d-glucose had the opposite effect. The results support the hypothesis that suboptimal insulin action and/or perturbed metabolic signals in WAT, as would be seen with insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes, could impair WAT BCAA utilization. However, cross-tissue flux studies comparing lean vs. insulin-sensitive or insulin-resistant obese subjects revealed an unexpected negligible uptake of BCAA from human abdominal SC WAT. This suggests that SC WAT may not be an important contributor to blood BCAA phenotypes associated with insulin resistance in the overnight-fasted state. mRNA abundances for BCAA catabolic enzymes were markedly reduced in omental (but not SC) WAT of obese persons with metabolic syndrome compared with weight-matched healthy obese subjects, raising the possibility that visceral WAT contributes to the BCAA metabolic phenotype of metabolically compromised individuals.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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