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Original Research Communication |
1 From the Department of General Internal Medicine (MMB, CW, MF, AEM, and HP), the Center for Human Drug Research (JB, MLdK, and AFC), and the Department of Endocrinology (JAR), Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands, and the Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Academic Medical Center (HPS), Amsterdam.
2 Address reprint requests to MM Buijs, Department of General Internal Medicine, Leiden University Medical Centre, C1-R39, PO Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, Netherlands. E-mail: m.m.buijs{at}lumc.nl.
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: To further explore the pathophysiology of blunted lipolysis during fasting in obesity, we simultaneously measured lipolysis and distinct neuroendocrine regulatory hormones in abdominally obese and normal-weight (NW) women.
Design: Eight abdominally obese [
± SD body mass index (BMI; in kg/m2): 32.1 ± 2.6] and 6 NW (BMI: 22.7 ± 1.5) women were studied during the last 8 h of a 20-h fast. The glycerol appearance rate and the serum and plasma concentrations of insulin, leptin, cortisol, and growth hormone were measured regularly.
Results: At 13 h of fasting, the mean (±SD) glycerol appearance rate corrected for fat mass was greater in NW women than in obese women (7.2 ± 1.0 and 5.1 ± 0.6 µmol·kg-1·min-1, respectively; P = 0.001). After a 20-h fast, lipolysis increased to 8.9 ± 1.5 mmol·kg-1·min-1 in NW women (23%), whereas it did not change significantly in obese women (-2%). Fasting decreased insulin concentrations by
30% in both groups, but it did not induce significant changes in leptin concentrations. Mean cortisol concentrations and urinary catecholamine excretion were comparable in both groups. However, mean plasma growth hormone concentrations were higher in NW women than in obese women (1.81 ± 0.98 compared with 0.74 ± 0.52 mU/L; P = 0.046). The relative change in lipolysis tended to correlate with mean plasma growth hormone concentrations (r = 0.515, P = 0.059).
Conclusion: Abdominal obesity-associated hyposomatotropism may be involved in the blunted increase in lipolysis during fasting.
Key Words: Lipid metabolism somatotropin starvation lipolysis rate obesity women
| INTRODUCTION |
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Both basal lipolysis and fasting-induced lipolysis are different in normal-weight (NW) and abdominally obese humans. Specifically, basal lipolysis per kilogram of fat mass is lower, whereas the rate of whole-body lipolysis is higher in obese humans. Lipolysis clearly increases during energy restriction in NW subjects, whereas the increase appears to be blunted in abdominal obesity (1, 2). The mechanism responsible for this metabolic difference among abdominally obese and NW humans has not yet been fully elucidated. It appears important to unravel the pathophysiology of this phenomenon, because blunted lipolysis during fasting may contribute to the preservation of fat mass.
Several hormones are involved in the complex neuroendocrine control of the metabolic adaptation to fasting. Insulin strongly stimulates fat storage by inhibiting hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL; EC 3.1.1.3) and by stimulating lipoprotein lipase (EC 3.1.1.34). Plasma insulin concentrations decline in response to energy restriction (3), which allows lipolysis to occur virtually without any time delay (4, 5). Catecholamines powerfully promote HSL activity while inhibiting that of lipoprotein lipase (6). Although plasma concentrations of norepinephrine and epinephrine will increase only slightly during a short-term fast in humans, catecholamine-mediated lipolysis is enhanced through an increase in adipose tissue ß-adrenoceptor sensitivity (1, 7).
Insulin and catecholamines seem to be of primary importance for the regulation of lipolysis, but other hormones [eg, cortisol and growth hormone (GH)] are known to modulate the lipolytic process. Cortisol inhibits HSL-mediated lipolysis and promotes lipoprotein lipase activity, thereby promoting fat accumulation (8). In contrast, GH stimulates adipose tissue lipolysis by enhancing the lipolytic response to epinephrine (9, 10) or by directly increasing HSL activity in adipocytes (11). Cortisol and GH act on the lipolytic process with a delay of several hours (8), and both hormones have been shown to play a significant role in the physiologic regulation of lipolysis in humans (12, 13). Circulating GH concentrations are profoundly reduced in abdominally obese humans (14), which potentially implicates GH in the pathophysiology of the blunted lipolytic response to fasting in these persons. Moreover, leptin is involved in the metabolic and behavioral response to fasting in rodents (15). Plasma leptin concentrations decline rather quickly during a short-term fast, which potentially counteracts the lipolytic action of the earlier mentioned hormones via direct and indirect mechanisms (15, 16).
One of the difficulties in integrating all these factors is that the data are derived from multiple studies. We therefore simultaneously measured lipolysis and variables of the above neuroendocrine control system during the last 8 h of a 20-h fast in abdominally obese and NW women. We reasoned that any apparent difference in hormonal adaptation to energy restriction between obese and NW subjects may contribute to aberrant lipolysis in obese persons.
| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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3 mo and did not exercise for >3 h/wk. During the 3 d immediately before the study, the participants consumed a weight-maintaining diet containing
250 g carbohydrate. The study protocol was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of Leiden University Medical Center. Subjects were recruited from the Center for Human Drug Research volunteer pool and by advertisements in the local media. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants.
Experimental design
The study was designed as an open observational study of 2 matched groups. After an overnight fast, the subjects were admitted to the Clinical Research Unit of the Center for Human Drug Research. They remained fasting in a semi-recumbent position until the end of the study period and were allowed only water. The subjects emptied the bladder just before the start of procedures. All urine produced during the study was collected for measurement of catecholamine and creatinine excretions.
A cannula was inserted into an antecubital vein for the infusion of isotope tracers. Another catheter, inserted in the dorsal vein of the hand of the other arm, was kept in a thermoregulated (60°C) box and was used to sample arterialized venous blood (17). This catheter was kept patent by the infusion of 0.9% NaCl (30 mL/h). At 1000 h (after 12 h of fasting), a primed (1.6 µmol/kg), constant (0.11 µmol·kg-1·min-1), intravenous infusion of [1,1,2,3,3-2H5]glycerol (or D5-glycerol; 98 atom percent excess; Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Andover, MA) dissolved in saline 0.9% (18) was begun; it was continued for 8 h with the use of a calibrated pump (6000+; Sigma, St Louis). Before isotope infusion, an arterialized venous blood sample was obtained for the measurement of background isotope enrichment. During the 8-h glycerol infusion, arterialized blood samples were obtained every 20 min for the measurement of total glycerol, glycerol-specific activity, insulin, cortisol, leptin, glucose, and fatty acids and every 10 min for the measurement of GH. Indirect calorimetry using a ventilated hood (Oxycon Beta; Jaeger Toennies, Breda, Netherlands) was performed for 30 min at 11, 15, and 17 h of fasting to estimate substrate oxidation rates (19).
On another day, total body fat mass and total lean body mass (LBM) were assessed with the use of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (QDR 4500; Hologic Inc, Waltham, MA; 20). The scanner had a CV of 2.1% for body fat mass and of 1.0% for LBM.
Blood sampling and biochemical analyses
Blood for the measurement of total glycerol, glycerol-specific activity, GH, cortisol, and leptin was collected in 2.7-mL lithium-heparin tubes. Fatty acids were measured in blood collected in 1.2-mL EDTA tubes. Insulin and glucose were measured in 1.2 mL serum. All blood samples were collected into chilled tubes, and heparin and EDTA samples were kept on ice. All tubes were centrifuged within 30 min of sampling (2000 x g at 4°C for 10 min). Plasma, serum, and urine samples were stored at -40°C and transported on dry ice before assay. All samples from one subject were run in the same batch.
Serum glucose and urinary creatinine were measured at the Leiden University Medical Center Clinical Chemistry Laboratory, using a fully automated system (Hitachi 747; Hitachi, Tokyo) system. Serum insulin was assayed by a radioimmunoassay (Medgenix, Fleurus, Belgium) with a detection limit of 3 mU/L. The interassay CV was 3.88.0%. Plasma leptin was measured by a radioimmunoassay (Linco Research, St Charles, MO), with a detection limit of 0.5 µg/L, an intra-assay CV of 3.48.3%, and an interassay CV of 3.06.2%. Plasma cortisol was assayed by a radioimmunoassay (Sorin Biomedica, Milan, Italy) with a detection limit of 25 nmol/L. The intra- and interassay precision varied from 2% to 4%. Plasma GH was measured by time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay (Delfia; Wallac, Turku, Finland) specific for the 22-kDa GH, which was used as the standard (Genotropin; Pharmacia Corp, Peapack, NJ) as calibrated against the World Health Organization First International Reference Preparation, 80/505 (to convert mg/L to mU/L, multiply by 2.6). The limit of detection was 0.03 mU/L. The intra-assay CV varied from 1.6% to 8.4% and the interassay CV from 2.0% to 9.9%. Plasma fatty acids were measured with an enzymatic colorimetric assay kit (Boehringer, Mannheim, Germany). Plasma glycerol concentrations and stable isotope tracer enrichment were measured in a single analytic run with the use of gas chromatographymass spectrometry (Hewlett-Packard, Palo Alto, CA) as described previously (21). Catecholamines in urine were measured by an HPLC method and then by electrochemical detection.
Calculations
Glycerol concentration and enrichment data were individually smoothed by spline fitting (22), and the rate of appearance (Ra) of glycerol, as a measure of lipolysis, was calculated by the use of both smoothed and raw data. Steeles equation for non-steady state conditions adjusted for stable isotopes was used to calculate these lipolysis rates (23, 24). The effective volume of distribution of glycerol was assumed to be equal to the extracellular fluid volume as measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (25). In the case of glycerol, it is not necessary to compensate for nonuniform mixing, and so the correction factor p of the non-steady state equation was assumed to be equal to 1 (26).
Time profiles of lipolytic variables (lipolysis, plasma glycerol, and fatty acid concentrations) and plasma glucose concentrations were compared between the NW and obese groups by the use of values characterizing the profiles at the first hour and at the last hour of the experiment. Plasma glycerol, fatty acid, and glucose concentration data were therefore characterized by calculating the average value from 1000 to 1100 and that from 1700 to 1800. Because plasma D5-glycerol concentrations reached steady state after 1 h of continuous infusion, average lipolysis was calculated from 1100 to 1200 and from 1700 to 1800 with the use of both raw (Ra raw) and spline-fitted (Ra-fitted) glycerol enrichment data.
Plasma insulin and leptin concentrations were analyzed similarly to glycerol and fatty acids, because changes in these hormones will affect lipolysis immediately (27). In contrast, plasma GH and cortisol concentrations will affect lipolysis rate with a time delay by changing the sensitivity of the adipose tissue to other hormones. Therefore, these hormones were characterized by use of the average of concentrations over the full 8-h period. Moreover, as GH is secreted in a pulsatile pattern, it is not useful to compare the average of GH concentrations obtained over 2 periods of 1 h each.
Catecholamine exposure was calculated from collected urine as urinary catecholamines released/mmol creatinine to correct for differences in urine concentration. Thus, the results cannot show a possible trend in catecholamine excretion over time. However, previous studies have shown that the concentration of plasma norepinephrine and epinephrine during short-term fasting remains below the reported threshold for lipolysis (28). Changes in substrate oxidation rates expressed per kilogram of LBM from the first measurement (0900) to the last (1500) measurement were compared between the NW and obese groups.
Statistical analysis
Calculations were performed by using SPSS for Windows, version 10.0.7 (SPSS, Inc, Chicago). Between-group comparisons of basal variables were performed by using the unpaired 2-tailed Students t test. Glycerol Ra, glycerol, fatty acids, insulin, leptin, and glucose were also analyzed after log transformation, and the results were back-transformed, yielding estimates of percentage increase. Finally, Pearsons correlation coefficient was computed to determine the relation between specific variables. P < 0.05 was considered significant. Data are presented as means (±SDs).
| RESULTS |
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| DISCUSSION |
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GH affects lipolysis in various ways. It indirectly promotes the lipolytic response to epinephrine by increasing adipocyte ß-adrenoceptor number and sensitivity (9, 10, 29). In addition, GH stimulates HSL activity in adipocytes directly (11). Adipocytes of obese humans and experimental animals are unequivocally characterized by a reduced ß-adrenoceptor number and sensitivity (6, 30, 31). In accordance, the lipolytic response to epinephrine in vivo is suppressed in (abdominally) obese humans (30, 32). Plasma catecholamines per se do not reach the threshold concentrations that are necessary to stimulate lipolysis during a short-term fast in humans (28, 33). However, the reduction of insulin concentrations during fasting allows ß-adrenoceptormediated lipolysis to occur. A reduced ß-adrenoceptor number or sensitivity may then blunt the lipolytic response to energy restriction. In view of the effects of GH on adipocyte adrenoceptors, it is conceivable that hyposomatotropism contributes to the diminished ß-adrenoceptor number or sensitivity in (abdominally) obese humans. The study of Yang et al (34), in which catecholamine-induced lipolysis was shown to be enhanced by GH restoration in hypophysectomized rats, corroborates this concept. Therefore, our data support the notion that obesity-associated hyposomatotropism contributes to diminished basal lipolysis per unit of fat mass and the blunted lipolytic response to short-term fasting in abdominally obese humans.
Our data are in accordance with previous reports showing reduced plasma GH concentrations in obesity (35, 36), particularly the abdominal type (14), and an attenuated increase in lipolysis during a short-term fast in upper-body obese subjects compared with the increase in NW subjects (2). However, these phenomena were never studied simultaneously within the same subjects, although the importance of GH in the regulation of lipolysis has been shown in humans (37). Other authors have offered a different explanation for the blunted lipolytic response in obesity. Horowitz et al (2) suggested that the distinct lipolytic responses of obese women and NW women during a short-term (22-h) fast related to a slight but significant difference in the decline of plasma insulin concentrations (20% and 32%, respectively). Their notion was supported by a significant correlation between the relative increase of glycerol Ra and relative decrease of plasma insulin. Our data do not confirm these findings. The relative decline in insulin concentrations during fasting was of the same order of magnitude in NW and obese women in our study (28% and 33%, respectively). Moreover, there was no correlation (r = -0.072) between the relative decline in serum insulin and the increase in glycerol Ra in our subjects. However, as discussed above, we do believe that the decrement of serum insulin concentrations is instrumental in the regulation of lipolysis during brief fasting in humans: it particularly allows ß-adrenoceptormediated lipolysis to occur. Because the relative decline in insulin was similar in obese subjects and in NW subjects in our study, the blunted fasting-induced lipolysis in obese persons is probably attributable to reduced adipocyte ß-adrenoceptor number and sensitivity in these subjects. Alternatively, it is conceivable that the fact that absolute insulin concentrations remained elevated in obese women throughout the experiment prevented lipolysis from increasing in these subjects. Insulinss inhibiting effect on lipolysis is much more potent than that of any other hormone, and the height of the circulating insulin concentration obviously affects its action in target tissues. Our study design did not allow disentanglement of these distinct inferences.
Considering prolonged (96-h) instead of short-term (24-h) fasting, it has been shown that the lipolysis rate increases during a 4-d fast in NW humans (7) and that this increase is persistently blunted in obese individuals (1). Interestingly, in keeping with these findings, the sensitivity of adipose tissue to ß-adrenergic receptor-mediated lipolysis increases during a long-term fast in NW humans (7), which does not appear to be the case in obese individuals (1). In addition, fasting induces insulin resistance in adipose tissue to allow lipolysis to increase even further (7). The mechanisms underlying these phenomena are unclear at present (7, 38). Pituitary GH secretion is considerably enhanced after 4 d of fasting in NW humans (39), whereas this increase is blunted in obese subjects (40, 41). Considering the above mentioned effects of GH on adipocyte ß-adrenoceptormediated lipolysis and the fact that GH antagonizes insulin action (42), it is conceivable that the rise of plasma GH concentrations in response to energy restriction plays a critical role in the physiology of the phenomena in NW humans. Obesity-associated hyposomatotropism may then explain the blunted increase in lipolytic sensitivity during a (prolonged) fast in obese humans.
Although the rate of lipolysis per unit of fat mass was lower in the abdominally obese women in our study than in the NW women, the whole-body lipolysis rate was higher in the obese women than in the NW women during the entire study period (Figure 1
). Therefore, the attenuated increase in lipolysis in the abdominally obese women did not compromise fatty acid availability as a source of energy. What useful purpose may blunted lipolysis serve in abdominally obese humans? It may protect against untoward effects of inappropriately elevated plasma fatty acid concentrations that potentially accompany enlarged adipose tissue stores. Fatty acids may damage pancreatic ß-cells (43) and reduce insulin sensitivity of skeletal muscle (44). The portal vein directs all venous drainage of visceral adipose tissue toward the liver. Therefore, upper-body fat storage in particular will be accompanied by a large portal fatty acid flux, which may damage the liver and activate neuroendocrine systems to cause hypertension and insulin resistance (45). Hyposomatotropism accompanying fat accumulation in combination with hyperinsulinemia and other adaptations to an abdominal obese state may serve to dampen lipolysis and thereby protect against the toxic effects of fatty acids (44). However, as an adverse sequel, a reduced rate of lipolysis per unit of fat mass potentially promotes the retention of body fat.
In summary, basal lipolysis per unit of fat mass is lower in abdominally obese women than in NW women, and the lipolytic response to a short-term fast is blunted in these obese subjects. The results of this study suggest that the hyposomatotropism associated with abdominal obesity is involved in the physiology of these metabolic features. Blunted lipolysis induced by energy restriction did not compromise fatty acid availability as a fuel in obese women, because the whole-body lipolysis rate was higher in abdominally obese women than in NW women. In fact, hyposomatotropism may serve to prevent an untoward increase in plasma fatty acid concentrations in upper-body obese humans. However, as an adverse sequela, reduced lipolysis per unit of fat mass in abdominally obese women may contribute to the preservation of adipose tissue mass.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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