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Regulation of Insulin Receptor Pathway and Glucose Metabolism by CD36 Signaling.

Citation
Samovski, D., et al. “Regulation Of Insulin Receptor Pathway And Glucose Metabolism By Cd36 Signaling.”. Diabetes, pp. 1272-1284.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Dmitri Samovski, Pallavi Dhule, Terri Pietka, Miriam Jacome-Sosa, Eric Penrose, Ni-Huiping Son, Charles Robb Flynn, Kooresh I Shoghi, Krzysztof L Hyrc, Ira J Goldberg, Eric R Gamazon, Nada A Abumrad
Abstract

During reduced energy intake, skeletal muscle maintains homeostasis by rapidly suppressing insulin-stimulated glucose utilization. Loss of this adaptation is observed with deficiency of the fatty acid transporter CD36. A similar loss is also characteristic of the insulin-resistant state where CD36 is dysfunctional. To elucidate what links CD36 to muscle glucose utilization, we examined whether CD36 signaling might influence insulin action. First, we show that CD36 deletion specific to skeletal muscle reduces expression of insulin signaling and glucose metabolism genes. It decreases muscle ceramides but impairs glucose disposal during a meal. Second, depletion of CD36 suppresses insulin signaling in primary-derived human myotubes, and the mechanism is shown to involve functional CD36 interaction with the insulin receptor (IR). CD36 promotes tyrosine phosphorylation of IR by the Fyn kinase and enhances IR recruitment of P85 and downstream signaling. Third, pretreatment for 15 min with saturated fatty acids suppresses CD36-Fyn enhancement of IR phosphorylation, whereas unsaturated fatty acids are neutral or stimulatory. These findings define mechanisms important for muscle glucose metabolism and optimal insulin responsiveness. Potential human relevance is suggested by genome-wide analysis and RNA sequencing data that associate genetically determined low muscle CD36 expression to incidence of type 2 diabetes.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Diabetes
Volume
67
Issue
7
Number of Pages
1272-1284
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1939-327X
DOI
10.2337/db17-1226
Alternate Journal
Diabetes
PMID
29748289
PMCID
PMC6014550
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