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Publication : Low-grade hypothalamic inflammation leads to defective thermogenesis, insulin resistance, and impaired insulin secretion.

First Author  Arruda AP Year  2011
Journal  Endocrinology Volume  152
Issue  4 Pages  1314-26
PubMed ID  21266511 Mgi Jnum  J:173872
Mgi Id  MGI:5050472 Doi  10.1210/en.2010-0659
Citation  Arruda AP, et al. (2011) Low-grade hypothalamic inflammation leads to defective thermogenesis, insulin resistance, and impaired insulin secretion. Endocrinology 152(4):1314-26
abstractText  Hypothalamic inflammation is present in animal models of obesity, and the intracerebroventricular injection of TNFalpha can reproduce a number of features of the hypothalamus of obese animals. Because obesity is a risk factor for type 2 diabetes (DM2) we hypothesized that, by inducing hypothalamic inflammation, we could reproduce some clinical features of DM2. Lean Wistar rats and TNF receptor 1-knockout mice were employed to determine the effects of hypothalamic actions of TNFalpha on thermogenesis and metabolic parameters. Signal transduction and protein expression were evaluated by immunoblot and real-time PCR. Thermogenesis was evaluated in living rats, and respirometry was determined in isolated muscle fiber. In Wistar rats, hypothalamic TNFalpha blunts the anorexigenic effect of leptin, which is accompanied by reduced leptin signaling and increased expression of suppressor of cytokine signaling 3. In addition, hypothalamic TNFalpha reduces O(2) consumption and the expression of thermogenic proteins in brown adipose tissue and skeletal muscle. Furthermore, hypothalamic inflammation increases base-line plasma insulin and insulin secretion by isolated pancreatic islets, which is accompanied by an impaired insulin signal transduction in liver and skeletal muscle. Hypothalamic inflammation induced by stearic acid also reduces O(2) consumption and blunts peripheral insulin signal transduction. The use of intracerebroventricular infliximab restores O(2) consumption in obese rats, whereas TNF receptor 1-knockout mice are protected from diet-induced reduced thermogenesis and defective insulin signal transduction. Thus, low-grade inflammation of the hypothalamus is sufficient to induce changes in a number of parameters commonly impaired in obesity and DM2, and TNFalpha is an important mediator of this process.
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