Publication | Open Access
Cultured Muscle Cells from Insulin-Resistant Type 2 Diabetes Patients Have Impaired Insulin, but Normal 5-Amino-4-Imidazolecarboxamide Riboside-Stimulated, Glucose Uptake
32
Citations
40
References
2004
Year
Insulin SignalingGlucose UptakeSkeletal MuscleInsulin-resistant Type 2Protein Kinase BHealth SciencesDiabetes ManagementBiochemistryInsulin ManagementType 2Cell BiologyImpaired InsulinCultured Muscle CellsInsulin ResistancePhysiologyDiabetesExercise PhysiologyDiabetes MellitusMetabolismMedicine
Impaired insulin action is a characteristic feature of type 2 diabetes. The study aims were to investigate whether after prolonged culture skeletal muscle cultures from insulin-resistant, type 2 diabetic patients (taking >100 U insulin/d) displayed impaired insulin signaling effects compared with cultures from nondiabetic controls and to determine whether retained abnormalities were limited to insulin action by studying an alternative pathway of stimulated glucose uptake. Studies were performed on myotubes differentiated for 7 d between passages 4 and 6. Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake (100 nm; P < 0.05) and insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis (1 nm; P < 0.01) were significantly impaired in the diabetic vs. control cultures. Protein kinase B (PKB) expression and phosphorylated PKB levels in response to insulin stimulation (20 nm) were comparable in the diabetic and control cultures. 5-Amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide riboside (AICAR) mimics the effect of exercise on glucose uptake by activating AMP-activated protein kinase. There was no difference in AICAR (2 mm)-stimulated glucose uptake between diabetic vs. control myotube cultures (P = not significant). In conclusion, diabetic muscle cultures retain signaling defects after prolonged culture that appear specific to the insulin signaling pathway, but not involving PKB. This supports an intrinsic abnormality of the diabetic muscle cells that is most likely to have a genetic basis.
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