Diabetes 56:2683-2689, 2007 DOI: 10.2337/db07-0378 © 2007 by the American Diabetes Association
Effect of Insulin Deprivation on Muscle Mitochondrial ATP Production and Gene Transcript Levels in Type 1 Diabetic Subjects
1 Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism and Endocrine Research Unit, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota Address correspondence and reprint requests to K. Sreekumaran Nair, MD, PhD, Mayo Clinic, 200 First St. SW, Joseph 5-194, Rochester, MN 55905. E-mail: nair.sree{at}mayo.edu
Abbreviations:
COX5B, cytochrome c oxidase subunit 5; CRU, Clinical Research Unit; HIF, hypoxia-inducible factor; IPA, ingenuity pathway analysis; MAPR, mitochondrial ATP production rate; NIH, National Institutes of Health; SDH, succinate dehydrogenase; TCA, tricarboxylic acid; TFAM, mitochondrial transcription factor A; UCP, uncoupling protein; UQCR, ubiquinol cytochrome c reductase; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor
OBJECTIVE—Muscle mitochondrial dysfunction occurs in many insulin-resistant states, such as type 2 diabetes, prompting a hypothesis that mitochondrial dysfunction may cause insulin resistance. We determined the impact of insulin deficiency on muscle mitochondrial ATP production by temporarily depriving type 1 diabetic patients of insulin treatment. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We withdrew insulin for 8.6 ± 0.6 h in nine C-peptide–negative type 1 diabetic subjects and measured muscle mitochondrial ATP production and gene transcript levels (gene array and real-time quantitative PCR) and compared with insulin-treated state. We also measured oxygen consumption (indirect calorimetry); plasma levels of glucagon, bicarbonate, and other substrates; and urinary nitrogen. RESULTS—Withdrawal of insulin resulted in increased plasma glucose, branched chain amino acids, nonesterified fatty acids, ß-hydroxybutyrate, and urinary nitrogen but no change in bicarbonate. Insulin deprivation decreased muscle mitochondrial ATP production rate (MAPR) despite an increase in whole-body oxygen consumption and altered expression of many muscle mitochondrial gene transcripts. Transcript levels of genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation were decreased, whereas those involved in vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling, inflammation, cytoskeleton signaling, and integrin signaling pathways were increased. CONCLUSIONS—Insulin deficiency and associated metabolic changes reduce muscle MAPR and expression of oxidative phosphorylation genes in type 1 diabetes despite an increase in whole-body oxygen consumption. Increase in transcript levels of genes involved in VEGF, inflammation, cytoskeleton, and integrin signaling pathways suggest that vascular factors and cell proliferation that may interact with mitochondrial changes occurred. Reduced skeletal muscle mitochondrial ATP production rate (MAPR) has been reported to occur in association with insulin resistance in several prevalent conditions including, but not limited to, type 2 diabetes (1–3) and offspring of people with type 2 diabetes (4), obesity (5), and during aging (6–8). In addition, poor glycemic control in type 2 diabetic patients results in substantial changes in transcript levels of many genes involved in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (9–11), but insulin treatment was shown to normalize many but not all of these alterations (2,9). It has been proposed that muscle mitochondrial dysfunction may cause insulin resistance (12), but an alternative hypothesis is that insulin resistance results in muscle mitochondrial dysfunction. Studies in nondiabetic people have shown that insulin infusion, while replacing glucose and amino acids, enhances muscle MAPR and transcript levels of both nuclear and mitochondrial genes involved in ATP production, indicating that insulin action per se can stimulate muscle mitochondrial function and gene activation (1). A recent study in type 2 diabetic patients demonstrated that at postabsorptive insulin levels, both type 2 diabetic and nondiabetic people have similar muscle MAPR and mitochondrial DNA abundance (2). Furthermore, whereas increasing insulin concentration resulted in an increase in MAPR in nondiabetic subjects, this response in MAPR did not occur in people with type 2 diabetes. This suggests that insulin resistance may contribute to muscle mitochondrial dysfunction. A reduced muscle mitochondrial capacity to produce ATP could contribute to the reduced peak oxygen uptake during aerobic exercise, as shown to occur with aging (7) and type 2 diabetes (13). Many other ATP-dependent cellular processes such as protein synthesis may also be adversely affected by reduced ATP production capacity. It remains to be determined whether insulin deficiency causes a decrease in muscle MAPR. A reduced MAPR during insulin deprivation in type 1 diabetic patients would suggest that reduced insulin action reduces muscle mitochondrial function. However, it has been observed that insulin deprivation in type 1 diabetes results in increased oxygen consumption, suggesting an increased rate of oxidative phosphorylation (14,15). Therefore, in the current study, we determined whether acute withdrawal of insulin treatment in C-peptide–negative people with type 1 diabetes results in reduced MAPR and alterations in transcript levels of genes involved in mitochondrial function. We studied nine people with type 1 diabetes in both the insulin-treated and insulin-deprived conditions and obtained muscle biopsies to compare treatment effects on MAPR and expression of gene transcripts.
People with type 1 diabetes were recruited using advertisements within the institution and in the Olmsted County, Minnesota, area. Informed written consent was obtained after a detailed review of the protocol, which had been approved by the Institutional Review Board of the Mayo Clinic and Foundation. All patients were screened with detailed history, physical examination, hematological, and biochemical profile. Exclusion criteria included renal insufficiency, coronary artery disease, other vascular disease, neuropathy, or poor wound healing and use of ß-blockers, tricyclic antidepressants, or anticoagulants. Body composition was measured using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DPX-L; Lunar, Madison, WI). Subject characteristics are given in Table 1.
Each subject performed two studies, the insulin-treated study day followed by the insulin-deprived study day, separated by 1–2 weeks. All subjects were placed on a weight-maintaining diet (energy content as carbohydrate:protein:fat = 55:15:30%) provided from the Mayo CTSA Clinical Research Unit (CRU) for 3 consecutive days before each inpatient study period. The insulin regimen of each participant was changed during this time. Those subjects on a multiple daily injection regimen (n = 7 of the 9 subjects) were instructed to use ultra rapid-acting insulin (aspart or lispro, recombinant insulins) before each meal and bedtime based on blood glucose, but long-acting insulin was discontinued for the 3 days before each overnight visit. Instructions were given to use short-acting insulin as needed to keep blood glucose concentration within the goal range of 4.4–6.6 mmol/l. Those subjects on an insulin pump (n = 2) using ultra rapid acting insulin continued their regimen until each admission. These subjects also had a target glucose range of 4.4–6.6 mmol/l. On the evening before each study, subjects were admitted to the CRU at 1700 h and stayed overnight until 1200 h the next day. A retrograde catheter was inserted into a dorsal hand vein for sample collection, and the hand was kept in a heating pad. A second intravenous catheter was placed in the contralateral forearm for infusions. After a standard dinner at 1800 h, a fasting state was maintained, except for water, until the end of each inpatient visit. In the morning, the hand with the retrograde catheter was kept in a "hot box" at 60°C to obtain arterialized venous blood (16). On the insulin-treated day, an intravenous insulin infusion using regular human insulin was started and the plasma glucose maintained between 4.44 and 5.56 mmol/l overnight until 1200 h the next day. Plasma glucose was measured every 30–60 min, and the insulin dose was adjusted every 30 min until midnight and every 15 min from midnight until the end of the study day. On the insulin-deprived day, the insulin infusion was discontinued for 8.6 ± 0.6 h. The muscle biopsy was not completed on one subject because of a plasma glucose level above 17 mmol/l and altered electrolytes and bicarbonate, resulting in discontinuation of the study. Blood samples for insulin, C-peptide, glucagon, amino acids, bicarbonate, ß-hydroxybutyrate, and free fatty acids were taken at three time points but reporting only the last sample representing the maximal period of insulin deprivation on the insulin-deprived day or a similar time point on the insulin-treated day. Vastus lateralis muscle samples were obtained at the end of the study (8.6 ± 0.6 h after insulin withdrawal or similar time point on the insulin-treated day under local anesthesia (lidocaine, 2%), with a percutaneous needle as described previously (17).
Hormones and substrates.
Urinary measurements.
Indirect calorimetry.
MAPR.
Analysis of gene transcripts using GeneChips.
GeneChip data processing.
Real-time quantitative PCR.
Statistics.
Hormones and substrates. Average plasma levels of glucose, glucagon, and total and branched chain amino acids were significantly higher during insulin deprivation than during insulin treatment (Table 2). Serum bicarbonate levels were not significantly different between the two groups (P = 0.1); however, ß-hydroxybutyrate levels were significantly higher in the insulin-deprived group than in the insulin-treated group (P < 0.001). Urinary nitrogen was measured in four subjects that showed a greater loss during insulin deprivation (49.1 ± 7.7 mmol/h) than during insulin treatment (31.5 ± 4.9) (P < 0.01), and nonesterified fatty acid levels also tended to decrease.
Skeletal muscle mitochondrial ATP production. Vastus lateralis muscle MAPR (n = 7) using several substrates, such as glutamate plus malate (7.7 ± 1.1 µmol · min–1 · g–1 in insulin-deprived vs. 10.5 ± 1.3 in insulin-treated patients, P < 0.008), pyruvate plus malate (3.8 ± 0.6 µmol · min–1 · g–1 in insulin-deprived vs. 5.0 ± 0.6 in insulin-treated patients, P < 0.01), pyruvate plus palmitoyl-L-carnitine plus -ketoglutarate plus malate (8.6 ± 1.1 µmol · min–1 · g–1 in insulin-deprived vs. 10.7 ± 1.6 in insulin-treated patients, P < 0.02), -ketoglutarate plus glutamate (5.7 ± 0.7 µmol · min–1 · g–1 in insulin-deprived vs. 7.6 ± 1.2 in insulin-treated patients, P = 0.01), and palmitoyl-L-carnitine plus 1 malate (3.6 ± 0.4 µmol · min–1 · g–1 in insulin-deprived vs. 4.7 ± 0.4 in insulin-treated patients, P = 0.02) (Fig. 1). Succinate plus rotenone was the only substrate used that did not reach statistical significance difference between the two groups (3.1 ± 0.7 µmol · min–1 · g–1 in insulin-deprived vs. 3.9 ± 0.6 in insulin-treated patients, P = 0.06). No statistically significant correlation was found between bicarbonate or ß-hydroxybutyrate and MAPR using each of the six substrates.
Indirect calorimetry. Oxygen consumption (Vo2) and carbon dioxide production (Vco2) were significantly higher during insulin deprivation than insulin treatment (n = 8) (Fig. 1). The respiratory quotient during insulin deprivation (0.76 ± 0.03) compared with insulin treatment (0.77 ± 0.02) was not different (P = 0.29).
Gene transcript levels: GeneChip arrays.
mRNA GeneChip validation. mRNA levels (corrected for 28S) of several mitochondrial enzymes and transporters were checked for validation of GeneChip array data (Fig. 3). Levels of COX5B (0.81 ± 0.03 in insulin-deprived vs. 0.93 ± 0.06 in insulin-treated patients, P < 0.05), COX10 (0.59 ± 0.07 in insulin-deprived vs. 0.66 ± 0.07 in insulin-treated patients, P = 0.05), UQCR (0.1.0 ± 0.06 in insulin-deprived vs. 1.12 ± 0.09 in insulin-treated patients, P < 0.05), and ATP5F1 (1.04 ± 0.04 in insulin-deprived vs. 1.15 ± 0.07 in insulin-treated patients, P < 0.05) were lower in insulin-deprived than in insulin-treated patients. In addition, mRNA (real-time PCR) of UCP2 levels, normalized to 28S (1.86 ± 0.6 in insulin-deprived vs. 1.97 ± 0.9 in insulin-treated patients, P = 0.4) and UCP3 levels (6.76 ± 2.3 in insulin-deprived vs. 5.3 ± 3.9 in insulin-treated patients, P = 0.7) were not significantly different between insulin treatment and insulin deprivation in type 1 diabetic subjects.
Insulin deprivation in type 1 diabetic subjects, as expected, resulted in clear metabolic changes consistent with insulin deficiency, including increased levels of glucose, amino acids, ß-hydroxybutyrate, and urinary nitrogen. However, the current study demonstrated that insulin deficiency resulted in a significant reduction in muscle MAPR demonstrated by measurements of maximal muscle ATP production capacity using six separate substrates. This muscle mitochondrial dysfunction was associated with alterations in transcript levels of several genes involving mitochondrial function and specifically a decrease in oxidative phosphorylation gene transcripts. Gene array analysis showed that after insulin deficiency, alterations in transcript levels involving several genes encoding mitochondrial proteins and several other pathways, including VEGFs and integrin signaling pathway, occurred. Selected gene transcripts were analyzed by real-time quantitative PCR that supported gene array results. The reduced muscle MAPR during insulin deprivation occurred despite an increase in energy metabolism as noted by an increase in whole-body oxygen consumption. The finding of increased oxygen consumption during insulin deprivation in type 1 diabetes is consistent with previous findings (14,15). The current study demonstrated that increased O2 consumption at the whole-body level was associated with a decrease in MAPR. The dissociation between O2 consumption and ATP production can occur if there is uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation. There was no change in UCP2 or UCP3 mRNA abundance, suggesting no change in UCP2 or UCP3 protein expression. It is controversial whether UCP2 and UCP3 are real UCPs in muscle because UCP1 is in brown adipose tissue (25), and other uncoupling mechanisms or regulators of ATP production rate may be responsible for the changes. Although we cannot exclude the possibility of uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation in skeletal muscle during insulin deprivation, no definitive data are currently available to support it. An alternative explanation that we favor is that increased Vo2, which represents whole-body O2 consumption, might have occurred in tissue (or tissues) other than skeletal muscle. Previous studies have shown that increased O2 consumption during insulin deprivation is related to elevated glucagon levels (15). Moreover, inhibition of glucagon secretion by somatostatin during insulin deprivation in type 1 diabetes reverses the increased O2 consumption. Re-introduction of glucagon increased O2 consumption in those subjects, demonstrating that high glucagon levels contributed to increased O2 consumption during insulin deprivation (15). Glucagon has also been shown to increase O2 consumption during insulin deficiency in nondiabetic healthy people (26). Because skeletal muscle does not have glucagon receptors and the liver is the main site of glucagon action, it is likely that much of the increased O2 consumption demonstrated at the whole-body level occurs in the liver. Previous studies have also shown that insulin deprivation in type 1 diabetic patients is associated with increased synthesis rates of muscle protein (high energy consuming process) in the splanchnic bed (27), indicating increased O2 consumption. The current study supports a hypothesis that reduced insulin action results in reduced MAPR, which was shown consistently using different substrates. The reduction in muscle MAPR is consistent with a previous report demonstrating that insulin infusion enhances muscle MAPR (1) and therefore insulin deficiency causes inhibition of MAPR. These effects of insulin on MAPR occurred after an 8-h infusion of insulin (1). In the current study, withdrawal of insulin from type 1 diabetic subjects for a comparable period of time resulted in a decline in MAPR. We used a gene array approach to measure transcript levels of over 40,000 genes, and the results support the reduction of the transcript level of many genes involved in mitochondrial function because of insulin deficiency. These results are confirmed by demonstrating similar directional changes by real-time PCR. As a group, the transcript levels of genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation were expressed at a significantly lower level during insulin deprivation. The mRNA transcript levels of many genes involved in MAPR, including ATP synthase, were expressed at lower levels during insulin deprivation. Interestingly, mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM) was also significantly lower in skeletal muscle of type 1 diabetic subjects during insulin deprivation. TFAM is a key, nuclear-encoded transcription factor that regulates transcription mitochondrial genes (28). Because TFAM expression is reduced, it is reasonable to assume that insulin deprivation also caused inhibition of transcription of mitochondrial genes. Most of the transcripts encoding mitochondrial proteins measured using the Affymetrix gene chip are nuclear encoded. It is intriguing that insulin deprivation caused upregulation of some genes encoding mitochondrial proteins, such as cytochrome c oxidase assembly protein, but it appears that none of the gene transcripts that are upregulated during insulin deprivation are directly involved in oxidative phosphorylation, per se. These upregulated gene transcripts may represent a compensatory response to the reduced mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation capacity.
Of note, the gene transcripts involving the integrin signaling, VEGF, leukocyte extravasation, and cytoskeleton signaling pathways were higher in skeletal muscle of type 1 diabetic subjects during insulin deprivation (Fig. 3). The exact role of these pathways in regulating mitochondrial DNA abundance and mitochondrial dysfunction is not clear. We noted that many gene transcripts involved in tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle are altered by insulin deprivation. One plausible mechanism of upregulation of VEGF axis might be the deregulation of TCA cycle components. Insulin deficiency inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase, but ketone bodies that increase during insulin deficiency escape this block and provide an alternative source of mitochondrial acetyl CoA (29). Also, succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) is a mitochondrial TCA cycle enzyme, and succinate, a TCA cycle metabolite, can accumulate because of SDH downregulation, transmitting a signal from mitochondria to the cytosol (30–33). A recent report suggests that once in the cytosol, succinate inhibits hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)- There are potential limitations in generalizing the results from this study to the decrease in insulin action in insulin-resistant states. Previous studies have shown an association between insulin resistance and muscle mitochondrial dysfunction, but it was unclear whether the insulin resistance resulted in or was secondary to mitochondrial dysfunction (41,42). The current results support insulin action, or lack of insulin, impacting mitochondrial ATP production and gene transcript levels. However, the potential interaction with secondary metabolic and hormonal changes and mitochondrial functions cannot be fully excluded based on the current study. It is possible that many metabolic changes, such as hyperglycemia and increased levels and metabolism of fatty acids, ketones, and amino acids, may have affected MAPR and gene transcript levels. At the whole-body level, there is no evidence of reduced glucose oxidation because respiratory quotient values were not different between insulin deprivation and insulin treatment. Previous studies have shown that glucose disposal during insulin deprivation is higher in type 1 diabetic patients, and presumably, because of the mass effect of increased glucose flux (43) and muscle being the main site of glucose disposal (44), it is likely that this increased glucose disposal occurred in muscle. Of interest, ß-hydroxybutyrate levels were elevated in type 1 diabetic patients during insulin deprivation, but this short duration of insulin deprivation in these well-hydrated patients with normal kidney function did not cause any metabolic acidosis as indicated by normal bicarbonate level.
In summary, the current study demonstrated that insulin deprivation caused an inhibition of skeletal muscle MAPR that occurred in association with alterations in several genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation. This result demonstrates that reduced insulin action and associated metabolic changes can downregulate muscle mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. This reduction in muscle oxidative phosphorylation, however, occurred in association with increased transcript levels of VEGF, HIF-1
This study received support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) (grant UL1-RR-024150-01), from the National Center for Research Resources, a component of NIH, NIH Roadmap for Medical Research (grant R01-DK-41973), and the David Murdock Dole Professorship. We gratefully acknowledge the support of General Clinical Research Center staff and the skillful technical assistance of Kate Klaus and Dawn Morse.
Published ahead of print at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org on 27 July 2007. DOI: 10.2337/db07-0378. Additional information for this article can be found in an online appendix at http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db07-0378. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. Received for publication March 20, 2007 and accepted in revised form July 23, 2007
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