Insulin resistance associated with altered fat partitioning in liver and adipose tissues is a prediabetic condition in obese adolescents. We investigated interactions between glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and the expression of lipogenic genes in abdominal subcutaneous adipose and liver tissue in 53 obese adolescents. Based on their 2-h glucose tests they were stratified in the following groups: group 1, 2-h glucose level ,120 mg/dL; group 2, 2-h glucose level between 120 and 140 mg/dL; and group 3, 2-h glucose level .140 mg/dL. Liver and adipose tissue insulin sensitivity were greater in group 1 than in group 2 and group 3, and muscle insulin sensitivity progressively decreased from group 1 to group 3. The expression of the carbohydrate-responsive elementbinding protein (ChREBP) was decreased in adipose tissue but increased in the liver (eight subjects) in adolescents with impaired glucose tolerance or type 2 diabetes. The expression of adipose ChREBPa and ChREBPb was inversely related to 2-h glucose level and positively correlated to insulin sensitivity. Improvement of glucose tolerance in four subjects was associated with an increase of ChREBP/GLUT4 expression in the adipose tissue. In conclusion, early in the development of prediabetes/ type 2 diabetes in youth, ChREBPb expression in adipose tissue predicts insulin resistance and, therefore, might play a role in the regulation of glucose tolerance. Copyright © 2013 by the American Diabetes Association.
CITATION STYLE
Kusawe, R., Caprio, S., Giannini, C., Narayan, D., Lin, A., D’Adamo, E., … Shulman, G. I. (2013). Decreased transcription of ChREBP-a/b isoforms in abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue of obese adolescents with prediabetes or early type 2 diabetes associations with insulin resistance and hyperglycemia. Diabetes, 62(3), 837–844. https://doi.org/10.2337/db12-0889
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