The link between obesity and diabetes is strong as well as complex. Fat cells produce many circulating regulators of insulin sensitivity, including pro-inflammatory cytokines. In rodents, resistin is produced by adipose tissue, and is a significant regulator of glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity. In humans, resistin is derived made mainly from macrophages. Given the emerging interrelationship between inflammation and metabolic disease, hyperresistinemia may be a biomarker, and/or a mediator, of metabolic and inflammatory diseases in humans as well as in rodents. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart.
CITATION STYLE
Lazar, M. A. (2007). Resistin- and obesity-associated metabolic diseases. In Hormone and Metabolic Research (Vol. 39, pp. 710–716). https://doi.org/10.1055/s-2007-985897
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