Spontaneous glucose uptake by brown adipose tissue (BAT) is lower in overweight or obese individuals and in diabetes. However, BAT metabolism has not been previously investigated in patients with type 2 diabetes during controlled cold exposure. Using positron emission tomography with 11C-acetate, 18F-fluoro-deoxyglucose (18FDG), and 18F-fluoro-thiaheptadecanoic acid (18FTHA), a fatty acid tracer, BAT oxidative metabolism and perfusion and glucose and nonesterified fatty acid (NEFA) turnover were determined in men with well-controlled type 2 diabetes and age-matched control subjects under experimental cold exposure designed to minimize shivering. Despite smaller volumes of 18FDG-positive BAT and lower glucose uptake per volume of BAT compared with young healthy control subjects, cold-induced oxidative metabolism and NEFA uptake per BAT volume and an increase in total body energy expenditure did not differ in patients with type 2 diabetes or their age-matched control subjects. The reduction in 18FDG-positive BAT volume and BAT glucose clearance were associated with a reduction in BAT radiodensity and perfusion. 18FDG-positive BAT volume and the cold-induced increase in BAT radiodensity were associated with an increase in systemic NEFA turnover. These results show that cold-induced NEFA uptake and oxidative metabolism are not defective in type 2 diabetes despite reduced glucose uptake per BAT volume and BAT "whitening.".
CITATION STYLE
Blondin, D. P., Labbé, S. M., Noll, C., Kunach, M., Phoenix, S., Guérin, B., … Carpentier, A. C. (2015). Selective impairment of glucose but not fatty acid or oxidative metabolism in brown adipose tissue of subjects with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes, 64(7), 2388–2397. https://doi.org/10.2337/db14-1651
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