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Mitochondrial dysfunction has divergent, cell type-dependent effects on insulin action

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Version 1 2014-11-11, 12:46
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 15:16 authored by SD Martin, Shona MorrisonShona Morrison, N Konstantopoulos, Sean McgeeSean Mcgee
The contribution of mitochondrial dysfunction to insulin resistance is a contentious issue in metabolic research. Recent evidence implicates mitochondrial dysfunction as contributing to multiple forms of insulin resistance. However, some models of mitochondrial dysfunction fail to induce insulin resistance, suggesting greater complexity describes mitochondrial regulation of insulin action. We report that mitochondrial dysfunction is not necessary for cellular models of insulin resistance. However, impairment of mitochondrial function is sufficient for insulin resistance in a cell type-dependent manner, with impaired mitochondrial function inducing insulin resistance in adipocytes, but having no effect, or insulin sensitising effects in hepatocytes. The mechanism of mitochondrial impairment was important in determining the impact on insulin action, but was independent of mitochondrial ROS production. These data can account for opposing findings on this issue and highlight the complexity of mitochondrial regulation of cell type-specific insulin action, which is not described by current reductionist paradigms.

History

Journal

Molecular metabolism

Volume

3

Pagination

408-418

Location

Amsterdam, Netherlands

Open access

  • Yes

eISSN

2212-8778

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Elsevier

Issue

4

Publisher

Elsevier BV