Diabetes 57:56-63, 2008 DOI: 10.2337/db07-0887 © 2008 by the American Diabetes Association
Insulin Resistance of Protein Metabolism in Type 2 DiabetesMcGill Nutrition and Food Science Centre, McGill University Health Centre/Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Address correspondence and reprint requests to Réjeanne Gougeon, McGill Nutrition and Food Science Centre, MUHC/Royal Victoria Hospital, 687 Pine Ave. West, H6.61, Montreal, QC H3A 1A1, Canada. E-mail: rejeanne.gougeon{at}muhc.mcgill.ca
Key Words:
OBJECTIVE—We previously demonstrated that 1) obesity impairs and 2) sex influences insulin sensitivity of protein metabolism, while 3) poor glycemic control in type 2 diabetes accelerates protein turnover in daily fed-fasted states. We hypothesized that type 2 diabetes alters the insulin sensitivity of protein metabolism and that sex modulates it.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Hyperinsulinemic (
RESULTS—In type 2 diabetes, postabsorptive (baseline) glycemia was 8–9 mmol/l, glucose production (Ra) and disposal (Rd) were elevated, and once clamped, endogenous glucose Ra remained greater and Rd was less (P < 0.05) than in control subjects. Baseline leucine kinetics did not differ despite higher insulin levels. The latter was an independent predictor of leucine flux within each sex. With clamp, total flux increased less (P = 0.016) in type 2 diabetic men, although protein breakdown decreased equally ( CONCLUSIONS—During our clamp, men with type 2 diabetes have greater insulin resistance of protein metabolism than that conferred by excess adiposity itself, whereas women do not. These results may have implications for dietary protein requirements. There is clear evidence for altered protein metabolism in type 1 diabetes (1–5), but in type 2 diabetes, results have been inconsistent. That protein metabolism in type 2 diabetes has been reported to be both unaffected and altered may stem from differences in study design: tracer method, adiposity, and sex of subjects; prevailing glycemia; normalization of data; and types of statistical analyses. We reported accelerated integrated fed-fasted kinetics of whole-body protein metabolism (using [15N]glycine) in obese type 2 diabetic subjects with hyperglycemia (6–9) compared with obese control subjects (6,7). Such studies required adjusting data for fat-free mass (FFM), sex, and age (6,8,9) and had precise control of protein and energy intake. When glycemic control was normalized with insulin (7), improved with oral antihyperglycemic agents (6), or normalized with oral agents and energy restriction (6), protein turnover was either improved or not different from that of obese control subjects. Most reports showing no alterations in type 2 diabetes (10–14) assessed postabsorptive and postinsulin states using amino acid tracers. However, one reported elevated postabsorptive catabolism in hyperglycemic type 2 diabetic patients, not corrected by prior insulin treatment (15). Another showed elevated rates of leucine transamination that decreased with better glycemic control, without altering leucine oxidation (16). During the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp, suppression of breakdown was shown to be both blunted (15) and unaffected (12,13). Any decrease in catabolism decreases endogenous amino acid concentrations and availability, thereby producing "paradoxical" decreases in synthesis (17,18). Therefore, defining the roles of insulin on synthesis and catabolism requires that plasma amino acids be maintained constant. We have used an hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp with circulating amino acids clamped at fasting levels. This also avoids raising plasma amino acids, which themselves stimulate anabolism. Both the conventional clamp (19) and our approach are experimental models rather than simulation of the fed state after mixed meals that cause hyperaminoacidemia and hyperglycemia. With this method, we found increased protein synthesis in lean men (20), a blunted response in obese women (21), and less net protein accretion in healthy women compared with men (22). The hypotheses of the present study are that type 2 diabetes affects the protein anabolic responses to hyperinsulinemia and that sex modifies these alterations. Hyperinsulinemic, euglycemic, and isoaminoacidemic clamps with leucine and glucose tracers were performed in overweight and obese men and women with or without type 2 diabetes. Groups of the same sex were matched for body composition and age. Data from some of the control subjects have been previously published (20–23).
Seventeen type 2 diabetic patients (7 women, 10 men) and 23 control subjects (12 women, 11 men) were admitted to the Clinical Investigation Unit of the MUHC/Royal Victoria Hospital (Table 1). Consent was obtained according to the institutional research ethics board. Subjects were screened by medical and dietary history, physical examination, and laboratory evaluation to assure the absence of hepatic, hematologic, renal, pulmonary, thyroid, and cardiovascular dysfunction. Inclusion criteria were that subjects be nonsmokers and have stable weight for 6 months and protein intakes within the Dietary Reference Intakes (24). Control subjects took no medications that affected metabolism and underwent a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (25). The groups within each sex were matched for anthropometric variables. Diabetes medications were stopped for 1 week and lipid-lowering medications upon admission, but antihypertensive agents were continued in four subjects.
Subjects consumed an isoenergetic, protein-controlled liquid formula (Ensure; Ross Laboratories, Montreal, QC, Canada) for 7 days in control and 8 days in type 2 diabetic subjects, with or without additional energy as canola oil and a glucose polymer (20). Total energy intakes were 1.5 times resting energy expenditure (REE), by indirect calorimetry (Deltatrac; SensorMedics, Yorba Linda, CA), with 60% from carbohydrate, 25% from fat, and 15% (1.7 g · kg FFM–1 · day–1) from protein. Premenopausal women were studied during the follicular phase. Twenty-four–hour urine was collected daily for determination of nitrogen balance (9). Subjects were weighed daily. Physical activity was limited to walks in and around the hospital. Premeal capillary glucose determinations (Accu-Chek Advantage; Roche Diagnostics, Laval, QC, Canada) were done in type 2 diabetic subjects. If hyperglycemia was >15 mmol/l, insulin (Humulin-R; Eli Lilly Canada, Toronto, ON, Canada) was administered but not for 15 h before the clamp. Energy in glycosuria was added daily (50% glucose polymer and 50% canola oil). Waist and hip circumferences were measured according to World Health Organization criteria (26). Body composition was assessed by bioelectrical impedance analysis (RJL-101A; RJL Systems, Detroit, MI) using equations validated for lean (27), overweight (28), obese (28), and older (29) subjects.
Hyperinsulinemic, euglycemic, and isoaminoacidemic clamp protocol. Postabsorptive and clamp physiological and isotopic steady states were attained. Blood was collected for substrates, hormones, and glucose and leucine kinetic determinations at baseline, every 10 min for 40 min before insulin, every 30 min until the last 40 min, and then every 10 min. Expired air samples were collected and then stored in Vacutainer tubes (Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ). Indirect calorimetry was performed for 20 min before and during the last 30 min of the clamp, and data used for calculation of leucine oxidation, nonprotein respiratory quotient, and glucose, protein, and fat oxidation.
Leucine kinetics were calculated according to ref. 31, using plasma [13C]
Assays.
Statistical analyses.
All subjects were overweight or obese (Table 1). Within each sex, age, body composition, and body fat distribution did not differ between type 2 diabetic and control subjects. HOMA-IR was higher in type 2 diabetic subjects. Two-hour oral glucose tolerance test glycemia was 7.1 ± 0.3 mmol/l in control subjects. Diabetes duration was 6 ± 1 years. Substrates and hormones are presented in Table 2. Baseline hyperglycemia in type 2 diabetic subjects was by design, but total BCAA, indispensable amino acids, and FFA were not different. In men, dispensable amino acids being higher (data not shown), total amino acid levels were higher in type 2 diabetic subjects. Results of individual amino acids are presented in online appendix 2. Insulin was significantly higher in female type 2 diabetic subjects. Baseline glucagon was not different. Sex differences included higher FFA and lower BCAA in women (P < 0.05).
The clamp glycemic goal of 5.5 mmol/l was reached in all groups, but it took 76 ± 11 min in the type 2 diabetic subjects; BCAA were clamped at baseline levels with amino acid infusion rates that did not differ in type 2 diabetes but were lower in women (P < 0.05), even when adjusted for FFM. Small but significant changes in indispensable amino acids and total amino acids were not different between control and type 2 diabetic subjects. FFAs were suppressed equally but to higher clamp levels in type 2 diabetes. Insulin reached the same typical postprandial concentrations among groups. Glucagon declined in control subjects but not in type 2 diabetic subjects.
Results of plasma [13C]
Endogenous glucose Ra was higher at baseline in type 2 diabetic subjects and decreased by a comparable amount with control subjects to higher clamp rates (Table 4). Glucose infusion rates were much lower in type 2 diabetic subjects. Total Rd in type 2 diabetes was higher at baseline and increased less to lower clamp levels. Oxidative Rd did not differ at baseline and increased to lower values in female type 2 diabetic patients. Nonoxidative Rd in type 2 diabetic subjects was higher at baseline but decreased to lower clamp values, whereas it increased in control subjects. Fat oxidation decreased equally during the clamp in all groups but was higher in female type 2 diabetic subjects both at baseline and during the clamp—even when adjusted for FFM. There was no type 2 diabetes effect on REE at baseline or during the clamp. It increased during the clamp only in men. Glucose infusion rates and clamp nonoxidative Rd adjusted for FFM were higher in male than in female control subjects (P < 0.05).
Controlled for FFM, postabsorptive leucine flux and protein synthesis correlated positively with fasting plasma insulin in men (r = 0.506, P = 0.023 and r = 0.528, P = 0.017, respectively) and leucine flux correlated with fasting insulin (r = 0.541, P = 0.020) and waist circumference (r = 0.579, P = 0.012) in women. Stepwise regression analysis showed that FFM and log of fasting insulin were the two significant independent variables that predicted 74% of the variance in postabsorptive flux in men and 87% of that in women. In men, the change in synthesis correlated with markers of insulin resistance of glucose: lnHOMA-IR (Fig. 1A), fasting lninsulin (r = –0.566, P = 0.008), and fasting plasma glucose (r = –0.576, P = 0.006), as well as with markers of insulin sensitivity: M (glucose infusion rate · kg–1 · min–1) (r = 0.557, P = 0.009) and insulin sensitivity index (M/clamp insulin, r = 0.508, P = 0.019). Lesser suppression of protein breakdown correlated with higher fasting lninsulin (r = –0.450, P = 0.041).
Unlike men, in women, the increase in net leucine balance did not correlate with the increase in protein synthesis—only with that in breakdown (r = –0.701, P = 0.001) and in oxidation (r = –0.497, P = 0.030). Changes in synthesis related to body fat distribution, with a significant correlation between waist-to-hip ratio and the change in synthesis (Fig. 1B). It is noteworthy that lnHOMA-IR correlated strongly with lnM and insulin sensitivity index (r = –0.816, P < 0.001 and r = –0.786, P < 0.001, respectively) in men and (r = –0.889, P < 0.001 and r = –0.813, P < 0.001) in women. Data for percent changes in leucine kinetics during the clamp are compared with our previous results from lean subjects (nine men: BMI 21.3 ± 0.4 kg/m2, age 26 ± 1 years FFM 59 ± 1 kg and eight women: BMI 20.8 ± 0.3 kg/m2, age 24 ± 1 years, FFM 41 ± 1 kg) using the identical protocol, in Fig. 2A for men and Fig. 2B for women. This emphasizes that the abnormalities in type 2 diabetes, although relatively modest when compared with matched subjects without diabetes, are extremely large compared with lean subjects (20,21).
Stepwise regression analysis of the present study showed that in men, lnHOMA-IR predicted 37% of the variance in the increase in flux and 44% of that in synthesis; in women, waist-to-hip ratio and hip circumference predicted 66% of the variance in the increase in flux, and waist-to-hip ratio predicted 40% of that in synthesis.
This study demonstrates that insulin-resistant overweight and obese individuals with type 2 diabetes also have insulin resistance of protein metabolism that is expressed differently in men than in women. While in the postabsorptive state, in both sexes elevated plasma insulin, a marker of insulin resistance, is associated with elevated leucine flux, the response to the clamp is sex determined. The increase in total flux in male type 2 diabetic subjects is blunted, and this difference is driven by failure of stimulation of protein synthesis (Fig. 2A). This abnormal response to hyperinsulinemia is predicted by multiple recognized markers of insulin resistance of glucose, indicating concurrent resistance of both. In women, type 2 diabetes does not have an additive effect on the already blunted responses in flux and synthesis of body composition–matched control women (Fig. 2B). Our postabsorptive leucine kinetic results are consistent with most studies comparing type 2 diabetic subjects with weight, BMI, percentage of ideal body weight, or percent body fat–matched control subjects (10–13,16). Elevated fasting rates of leucine oxidation in type 2 diabetes in one study is likely because only the type 2 diabetic subjects were on a hypoenergetic diet (35). The study of type 2 diabetes with highest A1C showing augmented postabsorptive protein breakdown (or flux) suggests that poor diabetes control is an important factor (15). That study and ours found positive correlations of breakdown with fasting insulin. Furthermore, we found a negative correlation between fasting insulin and net balance (all subjects included, P < 0.02). Therefore, given their greater hyperinsulinemia, our results support the presence of insulin resistance of postabsorptive protein metabolism in type 2 diabetes, as previously implied (12,13). By clamping amino acids at fasting levels and preventing the hypoaminoacidemia of conventional clamps, we observe smaller increases in total leucine flux and no response of protein synthesis in type 2 diabetic men. This is due primarily to resistance during hyperinsulinemia at clinically relevant peak concentrations reached by similar subjects after a mixed meal (data not shown). Our protocol maintained euglycemia, constant baseline BCAA, and total indispensable and total amino acids within ranges of interindividual variability and reference postabsorptive concentrations (36). The small changes in individual amino acids observed are unlikely to be of physiological significance compared with hypoaminoacidemia systematically observed in conventional clamp studies that do not report a type 2 diabetes effect (12,13,15). A sustained glycemia of 5.5 mmol/l was a prerequisite for comparison of leucine and glucose kinetics to those of control subjects. Although this glycemic normalization was brief, it may have attenuated even greater abnormalities in type 2 diabetes. Despite this, there is a significant negative correlation between fasting glycemia and change in synthesis in the men. The smaller insulin-induced increase in REE in diabetes (Table 4) is consistent with the lack of stimulation of protein synthesis, an energy-requiring process (37). Our fed-fasted 15N-glycine studies showed that protein flux, breakdown, and synthesis are elevated in hyperglycemic type 2 diabetic subjects, while net balance is diminished (6–8). We now show that higher fasting insulin correlates with higher postabsorptive flux and more negative net balance. There is evidence that the accelerated fed-fasted whole-body protein turnover rates in type 2 diabetes likely lie in amino acid and insulin effects captured during the postprandial states. First, amino acid–induced protein anabolism could be impaired in type 2 diabetes, as has been found in cirrhosis, another insulin-resistant disorder (38). Second is the lower postprandial insulin response in type 2 diabetes (39). Third, improving glucose control with insulin or antihyperglycemic agents improves protein metabolism (6,7), and the rates of protein breakdown are proportional to glycemia (40). Hence, lesser postprandial insulin response, greater postprandial hyperglycemia, and impaired amino acid action could elevate proteolysis, thereby increasing the availability of substrates for protein synthesis. Increased amino acid availability also downregulates the insulin signaling pathway (41), thereby creating a cycle of insulin resistance of glucose and protein metabolism that would worsen as metabolic control deteriorates in type 2 diabetes. The overweight-obese control groups have insulin resistance when compared with lean normal subjects, as previously shown for obesity (21). Male type 2 diabetic subjects have a markedly smaller increment of flux and synthesis than lean subjects and a somewhat smaller increment than control subjects (Fig. 2A). Clamp net balance is less than in lean men. Female type 2 diabetic and nondiabetic control subjects both have impaired stimulation of flux and synthesis compared with lean subjects, and clamp net balance is less (Fig. 2B). The percent increment in oxidation is not different among groups within each sex, but it is more in women than in men (data not shown). That breakdown inhibition is not different among groups, within each sex, indicates that the level of hyperinsulinemia (that was the same in lean subjects) was sufficient for optimal suppression; therefore, the processes involved may have different insulin dose-response relationships than for synthesis. Sex differences in leucine kinetics are only present during the clamp. The women have significantly less suppression of protein breakdown than men (16 vs. 22%) (Table 3 and Fig. 2), as previously published (22). This is reflected in lower amino acid infusion rates, also consistent with less insulin sensitivity of protein metabolism. The increase in net balance in men results from the magnitudes in the decrease in breakdown, increase in synthesis, and lower rates of oxidation. In women, the increase in net balance is due to the magnitude of suppression of protein breakdown concurrent with lesser increases in oxidation. Unlike in men, rates of synthesis did not relate to net balance. The fates of amino acids from infusion and from protein breakdown differ between male and female control subjects: percent increases in rates of synthesis are comparable, but those of oxidation are higher in women (40 vs. 18%, P = 0.039). This could be interpreted as "glucose sparing," suggested by their lower rates of glucose infusion and insulin-mediated nonoxidative Rd. Of note is that the sex differences in clamp glucose Rd in control subjects are not observed in type 2 diabetic subjects. In the latter, clamp FFA concentrations are higher, fat oxidation is higher (significantly so in women), and endogenous glucose production is less suppressed, such that glucose infusion rates and disposal are substantially less in both male and female type 2 diabetic versus control subjects. This coexistence of insulin resistance of glucose and protein metabolism is reinforced by HOMA-IR as a predictor of the changes in flux and synthesis and the negative correlation between the change in synthesis and HOMA-IR in men (Fig. 1A). The negative correlation between the change in protein synthesis and waist-to-hip ratio in women (Fig. 1B) suggests that body fat distribution has a greater impact on protein metabolism than in men. This is consistent with a study showing that larger hip circumferences have a "protective" effect on insulin sensitivity of glucose (42). The relative importance of insulin versus amino acids in stimulating protein synthesis and anabolism in humans depends on their concentrations and availability. In skeletal muscle, where most protein turnover occurs in the postprandial state, both insulin and amino acids stimulate synthesis, but their complementary effects vary according to their concentrations (18). It has been suggested that insulin does not have additional effects on protein synthesis during hyperaminoacidemia (17). However, increasing amino acid concentrations with insulin at 500–600 pmol/l increased whole-body protein synthesis stepwise (17). Since we maintained isoaminoacidemia at comparable amino acid infusion rates, it is probable that the differences are due to insulin resistance. Our results suggest a change is required in the prevailing view that protein metabolism is "normal" in type 2 diabetes. Prior studies included 1) study groups having both sexes (15) or only women (10,11), 2) differing adjustments for body composition (10–16,35), 3) no prior diet control (12,35), 4) presence of comorbidities (11,35), 5) insulin therapy overlapping the kinetic study (11,12) attenuating possible differences, 6) pharmacologic hyperinsulinemia (15), 7) lean type 2 diabetic subjects (13,35), and 8) use of conventional hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps (12,13,15). To our knowledge, no prior clamp study in type 2 diabetes was isoaminoacidemic. Thus, using a clamp that maintains postabsorptive amino acids and glycemia and postprandial-level hyperinsulinemia helps resolve prior controversies regarding insulin resistance of protein metabolism in overweight and obese individuals with type 2 diabetes. The magnitude of this defect is considerable when compared with lean normal subjects, but much of it is due to adiposity itself (21). In addition, the sex influence on the protein anabolic action of insulin (22) contributes to differences in responses in type 2 diabetes. These findings have implications for dietary protein requirements, which are likely to be influenced by diabetes control, concurrent obesity or overweight, energy restriction, and sex.
This study was supported by grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (MOP-94059 and MOP-77562 to R.G.) and salary awards to R.G. and S.P. from the McGill University Health Centre Research Institute, to S.C. from the Canadian Diabetes Association, and to J.A.M. from the Fonds de recherche en santé du Québec. We thank Mary Shingler, Josie Plescia, Karen French, Marie Lamarche, Ginette Sabourin, Concettina Nardolillo, Madeleine Giroux, and Paul Meillon for their assistance.
Published ahead of print at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org on 16 October 2007. DOI: 10.2337/db07-0887. Additional information for this article can be found in an online appendix at http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db07-0887. 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 July 22, 2007 and accepted in revised form October 11, 2007
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