Chronic infusion of norepinephrine into the VMH of normal rats induces the obese glucose-intolerant state

Author:

Cincotta Anthony H.1,Luo Shuqin1,Zhang Ying1,Liang Yin1,Bina Keshavan G.1,Jetton Thomas L.1,Scislowski Piotr W. D.1

Affiliation:

1. Ergo Science Corporation, North Andover, Massachusetts 01845

Abstract

Increases in ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) norepinephrine (NE) levels and/or activities have been observed in a variety of animal models of the obese insulin-resistant condition. This study examined the metabolic effects of chronic NE infusion (25 nmol/h) into the unilateral VMH of normal rats. Within 4 days, VMH NE infusion significantly increased plasma insulin (140%), glucagon (45%), leptin (300%), triglyceride (100%), abdominal fat pad weight (50%), and white adipocyte lipogenic (100%) and lipolytic (100%) activities relative to vehicle-infused rats. Furthermore, isolated islet insulin secretory response to glucose (15 mM) within 4 days of such treatment was increased over twofold ( P < 0.05). Among treated animals, fat stores continued to increase over time and plateaued at ∼2 wk (3-fold increase), remaining elevated to the end of the study (5 wk). By week 4 of treatment, NE infusion induced glucose intolerance as evidenced by a 32% increase in plasma glucose total area under the glucose tolerance test curve ( P< 0.01). Whole body fat oxidation rate measured after 5 wk of infusion was significantly increased among treated animals as evidenced by a reduced respiratory quotient (0.87 ± 0.01) relative to controls (0.90 ± 0.01). VMH NE infusion induced hyperphagia (30%) only during the first week and did not affect body weight over the 5-wk period. Increases in VMH NE activity that are common among obese insulin-resistant animal models can cause the development of this obese glucose-intolerant (metabolic) syndrome.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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