Metabolic endotoxemia initiates obesity and insulin resistance
- PMID: 17456850
- DOI: 10.2337/db06-1491
Metabolic endotoxemia initiates obesity and insulin resistance
Abstract
Diabetes and obesity are two metabolic diseases characterized by insulin resistance and a low-grade inflammation. Seeking an inflammatory factor causative of the onset of insulin resistance, obesity, and diabetes, we have identified bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as a triggering factor. We found that normal endotoxemia increased or decreased during the fed or fasted state, respectively, on a nutritional basis and that a 4-week high-fat diet chronically increased plasma LPS concentration two to three times, a threshold that we have defined as metabolic endotoxemia. Importantly, a high-fat diet increased the proportion of an LPS-containing microbiota in the gut. When metabolic endotoxemia was induced for 4 weeks in mice through continuous subcutaneous infusion of LPS, fasted glycemia and insulinemia and whole-body, liver, and adipose tissue weight gain were increased to a similar extent as in high-fat-fed mice. In addition, adipose tissue F4/80-positive cells and markers of inflammation, and liver triglyceride content, were increased. Furthermore, liver, but not whole-body, insulin resistance was detected in LPS-infused mice. CD14 mutant mice resisted most of the LPS and high-fat diet-induced features of metabolic diseases. This new finding demonstrates that metabolic endotoxemia dysregulates the inflammatory tone and triggers body weight gain and diabetes. We conclude that the LPS/CD14 system sets the tone of insulin sensitivity and the onset of diabetes and obesity. Lowering plasma LPS concentration could be a potent strategy for the control of metabolic diseases.
Comment in
-
Comment on: Cani et al. (2007) Metabolic endotoxemia initiates obesity and insulin resistance: Diabetes 56:1761-1772.Diabetes. 2007 Dec;56(12):e20; author reply e21. doi: 10.2337/db07-1181. Diabetes. 2007. PMID: 18042755 No abstract available.
-
The gut-liver-axis: endotoxemia, inflammation, insulin resistance and NASH.J Hepatol. 2008 Jun;48(6):1032-4. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2008.03.007. Epub 2008 Apr 3. J Hepatol. 2008. PMID: 18468548 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
Molecular Biology Databases
Research Materials