Tuesday, February 18, 2025
Scopinaro and biliarypancreatic diversion
Saturday, February 08, 2025
Synchronicity and the origins of Protons (2)
This is the paper which Amber mentioned in her podcast conversation, primarily in the context that low carbohydrate, high fat diets markedly reduce hunger in diabetic rats. I wasn't looking at that aspect, what had caught my attention was the caloric intakes of the non diabetic rats on different levels of linoleic acid inatke and I had this post pretty well complete. Which looked pretty uninteresting unless you have a Protons perspective. Here's the post very much as was:
Response of Normal and Diabetic Rats to Increasing Dietary Medium-Chain Triglyceride Content
and this is the core quote:
"On the other hand, LCT-fed [corn oil, 55% linoleate] normal rats overate for several days when they were given the higher fat diet."
Monday, February 03, 2025
Synchronicity and the origins of Protons
Thursday, January 23, 2025
Satiety (06) The MCAT mice
Tucker emailed me this paper while I was writing the last post:
Saturday, January 11, 2025
Satiety (05) Threonine/alanine and the fasting insulin resistance
Shulman had a "That's interesting" moment in his 2016 paper which unfortunately got filed under "everything else was as we expected", and placed on the penultimate page of the supplementary data.
Sunday, January 05, 2025
Satiety (04) D12942 and insulin resistance(s)
These are just some of the illustrations I doodled out for the last post while thinking about insulin sensitivity/resistance in D12942 fed mice. I hope they make it clearer what Shulman was looking at in 2016 and what he moved on to look at in 2021, comparing D12942 feeding to control mice versus to his mouse model with the Thr1150 to alanine (Thr1150A) switch.
I've left various possible routes for the development of insulin resistance dashed for D12942 because that still needs a significant amount of discussion, see below. I've also added in yellow a line for the state of phosphorylation of the Thr1150A substituted mouse mutant. What the 30 minute clamp is looking at is the residual physiological insulin resistance at a time when hunger on D12942 has almost normalised and the level of phosphorylation of Thr1150 is approaching what it should be if D12942 was a physiological high fat diet.
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
Satiety (03) 30 minutes vs 140 minutes
In order to address this possibility, we performed a much shorter 30-minute HEC study with a lower-dose insulin infusion rate (2.0 mU/[kg-min]) to evaluate insulin action in WAT in InsrT1150A mice subjected to 7-day HFD."
As Shulman tells us, fasting phosphorylates human Thr1160. The subjects of the above study had an insulin tolerance test before fasting and then fasted for 60 days. This is likely to have phosphorylated the Thr1160 of their insulin receptors to the maximum physiological level possible. Under these extreme fasting conditions the insulin tolerance test was repeated. Despite the weight loss the insulin concentrations in plasma were remarkably consistent between the two tolerance tests. Kudos to whoever calculated the individualised insulin boluses.
Saturday, November 30, 2024
Satiety (02) TD.130051
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Satiety (01) Shulman's gift of threonine 1160
I have to acknowledge an important gift from Dr Shulman's lab in this paper:
At time point 10.35 he observes that this crucial insulin resistance pathway is activated under starvation, to spare glucose for the brain, hence its conservation.
Sunday, November 10, 2024
Rapeseed oil for weight loss (4): Hypocaloric satiety
A highly saturated fat-rich diet is more obesogenic than diets with lower saturated fat content
and is looking at this graph:
Monday, November 04, 2024
Rapeseed oil for weight loss (3) Canola oil vs butter round two
The oddity is the blip downwards of weight in canola fed rats, highlighted by the red oval on the graph:
Sunday, November 03, 2024
Rapeseed oil for weight loss (2) and butter for obesity round one
This is the next paper. These people are good. Really good. There is almost nothing amateurish in this paper:
A highly saturated fat-rich diet is more obesogenic than diets with lower saturated fat content"The present study tested canola, lard, and butter, respectively, low, moderate, and rich sources of SFA, widely consumed in the human diet, in an animal model of dietary obesity. As predicted, results confirmed the hypothesis that an SFA-rich diet is more obesogenic than diets with lower SFA content."