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      The pathogenesis of insulin resistance: integrating signaling pathways and substrate flux

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          Abstract

          Insulin resistance arises when the nutrient storage pathways evolved to maximize efficient energy utilization are exposed to chronic energy surplus. Ectopic lipid accumulation in liver and skeletal muscle triggers pathways that impair insulin signaling, leading to reduced muscle glucose uptake and decreased hepatic glycogen synthesis. Muscle insulin resistance, due to ectopic lipid, precedes liver insulin resistance and diverts ingested glucose to the liver, resulting in increased hepatic de novo lipogenesis and hyperlipidemia. Subsequent macrophage infiltration into white adipose tissue (WAT) leads to increased lipolysis, which further increases hepatic triglyceride synthesis and hyperlipidemia due to increased fatty acid esterification. Macrophage-induced WAT lipolysis also stimulates hepatic gluconeogenesis, promoting fasting and postprandial hyperglycemia through increased fatty acid delivery to the liver, which results in increased hepatic acetyl-CoA content, a potent activator of pyruvate carboxylase, and increased glycerol conversion to glucose. These substrate-regulated processes are mostly independent of insulin signaling in the liver but are dependent on insulin signaling in WAT, which becomes defective with inflammation. Therapies that decrease ectopic lipid storage and diminish macrophage-induced WAT lipolysis will reverse the root causes of type 2 diabetes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Clin Invest
          J. Clin. Invest
          J Clin Invest
          The Journal of Clinical Investigation
          American Society for Clinical Investigation
          0021-9738
          1558-8238
          4 January 2016
          4 January 2016
          4 January 2017
          : 126
          : 1
          : 12-22
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
          [2 ]Veterans Affairs Medical Center, West Haven, Connecticut, USA.
          [3 ]Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology and
          [4 ]Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
          Author notes
          Address correspondence to: Varman T. Samuel or Gerald I. Shulman, Yale University School of Medicine, PO Box 208020, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA. Phone: (203) 937-3848. E-mail: varman.samuel@ 123456yale.edu (V.T. Samuel) or gerald.shulman@ 123456yale.edu (G.I. Shulman).
          Article
          PMC4701542 PMC4701542 4701542 77812
          10.1172/JCI77812
          4701542
          26727229
          5212dc89-9e60-4eb2-8f90-568a44a3101b
          Copyright © 2016, American Society for Clinical Investigation
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