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Publication : Lack of FFAR1/GPR40 does not protect mice from high-fat diet-induced metabolic disease.

First Author  Lan H Year  2008
Journal  Diabetes Volume  57
Issue  11 Pages  2999-3006
PubMed ID  18678612 Mgi Jnum  J:141957
Mgi Id  MGI:3820128 Doi  10.2337/db08-0596
Citation  Lan H, et al. (2008) Lack of FFAR1/GPR40 does not protect mice from high-fat diet-induced metabolic disease. Diabetes 57(11):2999-3006
abstractText  OBJECTIVE: FFAR1/GPR40 is a G-protein-coupled receptor expressed predominantly in pancreatic islets mediating free fatty acid-induced insulin secretion. However, the physiological role of FFAR1 remains controversial. It was previously reported that FFAR1 knockout (Ffar1(-/-)) mice were resistant to high-fat diet-induced hyperinuslinemia, hyperglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia, and hepatic steatosis. A more recent report suggested that although FFAR1 was necessary for fatty acid-induced insulin secretion in vivo, deletion of FFAR1 did not protect pancreatic islets against fatty acid-induced islet dysfunction. This study is designed to investigate FFAR1 function in vivo using a third line of independently generated Ffar1(-/-) mice in the C57BL/6 background. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We used CL-316,243, a beta3 adrenergic receptor agonist, to acutely elevate blood free fatty acids and to study its effect on insulin secretion in vivo. Ffar1(+/+) (wild-type) and Ffar1(-/-) (knockout) mice were placed on two distinct high-fat diets to study their response to diet-induced obesity. RESULTS: Insulin secretion was reduced by approximately 50% in Ffar1(-/-) mice, confirming that FFAR1 contributes significantly to fatty acid stimulation of insulin secretion in vivo. However, Ffar1(+/+) and Ffar1(-/-) mice had similar weight, adiposity, and hyperinsulinemia on high-fat diets, and Ffar1(-/-) mice showed no improvement in glucose or insulin tolerance tests. In addition, high-fat diet induced comparable levels of lipid accumulation in livers of Ffar1(+/+) and Ffar1(-/-) mice. CONCLUSIONS: FFAR1 is required for normal insulin secretion in response to fatty acids; however, Ffar1(-/-) mice are not protected from high-fat diet-induced insulin resistance or hepatic steatosis.
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