Authors
Ethan J Anderson, Mary E Lustig, Kristen E Boyle, Tracey L Woodlief, Daniel A Kane, Chien-Te Lin, Jesse W Price, LI Kang, Peter S Rabinovitch, Hazel H Szeto, Joseph A Houmard, Ronald N Cortright, David H Wasserman, P Darrell Neufer
Publication date
2009/3/2
Journal
The Journal of clinical investigation
Volume
119
Issue
3
Pages
573-581
Publisher
American Society for Clinical Investigation
Description
High dietary fat intake leads to insulin resistance in skeletal muscle, and this represents a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress have been implicated in the disease process, but the underlying mechanisms are still unknown. Here we show that in skeletal muscle of both rodents and humans, a diet high in fat increases the H2O2-emitting potential of mitochondria, shifts the cellular redox environment to a more oxidized state, and decreases the redox-buffering capacity in the absence of any change in mitochondrial respiratory function. Furthermore, we show that attenuating mitochondrial H2O2 emission, either by treating rats with a mitochondrial-targeted antioxidant or by genetically engineering the overexpression of catalase in mitochondria of muscle in mice, completely preserves insulin sensitivity despite a high-fat diet. These findings place …
Total citations
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