Friday, February 06, 2026

Insulin restance (03) The failure to resist hat trick

I was searching my hard drive for another paper when I came across this one:

Substituting dietary saturated fat with polyunsaturated fat changes abdominal fat distribution and improves insulin sensitivity

which I picked up on X back when I used to be there.

Now, there are many, many, many problems with this paper which I don't want to dwell on here. All I want to document is that switching from a saturated fat including diet to an high polyunsaturated diet for 4 weeks *improves* insulin sensitivity in a motley collection of human beings. PUFAs increase (ie induce incorrect) insulin sensitivity.

The bottom line is that PUFA at 21g/d on a 2150kcal/d diet ie at ~9%E allows improved glucose uptake compared to PUFA at 10g/d on a 2400kcal diet, ie at ~4%E, especially during the final 20 minutes of a 120 minute hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp.















It's worth noting that while the glucose infusion rate was higher at all time points under PUFA, they only did stats on the final 20 minutes, which is quite normal for a clamp study.

Why do I like this mediocre study?

Confirmation bias.

We know that selective insulin sensitivity kicks in within an hour of a high fat meal, ie the Spanish study, and this is maintained out to 40 hours of oral fat ingestion, ie the Cocoa study. Both are discussed here.

The current study extends this out to 4 weeks.

A nice hat trick.

One entertaining quote from the abstract is their conclusion:

"If this result is confirmed in longer-term studies, this dietary manipulation would be more readily achieved by the general population than the current recommendations and could result in considerable improvement in insulin sensitivity, reducing the risk of developing Type II diabetes".

This, sadly, is a forlorn hope. 

What is going to happen to a person who increases their insulin sensitivity? What does insulin do to their adipocytes?

They get fat.

The human data suggest that having obese parents marks you out in two ways. One is that you eat, within the limits of the study assessment, more PUFA per day than a similar weight person with neither parent overweight. The second is that you are, on fasting insulin/glucose levels, very, very insulin sensitive. I would suggest that enhanced insulin signalling is going to make you fat.

You know the paper.

Being pre-obese allows the insulin sensitivity to show. Becoming overweight normalises the insulin sensitivity. Becoming seriously overweight leads to impaired glucose tolerance then eventually to frank type II diabetes.

I could throw in non PUFA derived rodent models.

The ventromedial hypothalamic lesion model, the neonatal MSG model, the gold thioglucose model. All present with pathological insulin sensitivity, so long as you measure it before obesity sets in.

Eventually obesity supplies FFA from distended adipocytes which, when oxidised, signal that it is essential to limit insulin signalling mediated caloric ingress in to cells on a pro rata basis to normalise the overall caloric ingress, accounting for that provided from FFA oxidation. Each cell needs to regulate caloric ingress to meet its correct needs.

All of the above rodent models eventually become obese and insulin resistant. But the insulin resistance *requires* the obesity. Caveat: insulin resistance requires that enough cells are large enough to release FFAs via accentuated basal lipolysis. Having a tonne of small adipocytes makes you obese without becoming insulin resistant. Until enough of those small adipocytes become large enough of course...

So increasing PUFA to 10% of energy intake will undoubtedly make you insulin sensitive. It will also make you pre-obese.

Just add time to delete the "pre-" part.

Peter

Wednesday, February 04, 2026

Insulin resistance (02) those Rhesus monkeys

I wrote this post several months ago but never got round to publishing it. Here we go.


I don't like this paper.

Targeting LDL improves insulin sensitivity and immune cell function in obese Rhesus macaques

and I am very grateful to Tucker for posting it on X and also for sending me a copy when I lost both the paper and the tweet.

Ignoring everything apart from the results section it has to be said that it does pose some interesting findings from the ROS hypothesis perspective.

Here we go.

They made rhesus monkeys fat using some unspecified "high fat" diet plus some fructose in their drinking water. This generated a model of metabolic syndrome without diabetes. The monkeys had normal glucose tolerance test results but at the cost of marked hyperinsulinaemia.

Next they developed/bought an antibody against highly oxidised LDL.

This significantly reduced the degree of insulin resistance and subsequent withdrawal of the antibody injections allowed a return of the insulin resistance. Like this:














The two upper lines are pre and post treatment and the lower small-dash line is while under treatment with the oxLDL binding antibody. If anyone would like to see how a slim monkey fed standard chow would respond to an IV glucose bolus, it's approximately the blue line which I've extrapolated from the data in panel G of the same figure to give this:














which makes the result slightly less impressive but still very real.

Some of us view the development of insulin resistance as an adaptive and an absolutely correct response to calories being supplied to a cell (or population of cells) without the mediation of insulin, with the result that insulin facilitated calories need to be rejected on a pro rata basis. This is the fundamental message from this paper:

Insulin resistance is a cellular antioxidant defense mechanism

which sets out that case and also integrates ROS as the oxidant stress signal which mediates it. Pure Protons.

So the obvious explanation for the improvement from scavenging highly oxidised LDL particles from the blood stream is that this, mechanistically, *must* be reducing the delivery of lipid to somatic cells, so reducing the necessity to resist insulin's signal. Which could be simply explained if oxLDL itself was a lipolytic agent in much the same way as fructose is lipolytic

Metabolic fate of fructose in human adipocytes: a targeted 13C tracer fate association study


Aside: while I would in no way suggest people prioritise oxidised frying oil (group HO) as a source of calories, it's one hell of a weight loss intervention:

A high oxidised frying oil content diet is less adipogenic, but induces glucose intolerance in rodents





The insulin sensitivity of these rats and mice is worth discussing separately but IMNSVHO they are exquisitely insulin sensitive but cannot secrete adequate insulin. Not good but absolutely NOT obesogenic. An insulin tolerance test would be fascinating and probably fatal. End aside.

So I spent some time down this lipolysis rabbit hole on PubMed and I might even be correct, there is certainly a hint that oxLDL is an ROS generator in an "adipocyte-like" cell model, bearing in mind you can show just about whatever you like in 3T3-L1 adipocyte models (caveat, I've not read the full paper):

Oxidized LDL and lysophosphatidylcholine stimulate plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 expression through reactive oxygen species generation and ERK1/2 activation in 3T3-L1 adipocytes

so maybe it's that simple, but probably not. More likely is that oxLDL delivers 4-HNE to adipocytes and the ROS developed in response to 4-HNE triggers the lipolysis cited above.

Here's what the Rhesus monkey researchers think is going on based on their very clever experiments:











There are essentially two processes going on in this macrophage. Everything down the left side of the image is pro-inflammatory and, if these are detected, the macrophage activates NF-kB mediated inflammatory cytokine release and associated insulin resistance, shown on the right. Down the (right hand brach of the) central section is the oxLDL/antibody complex activating a negative feed back mechanism to inhibit NF-kB activation and subsequent cytokine mediated insulin resistance.

This looks quite simple. In the presence of an acute infection cells of the white blood lines (mostly macrophages and polymorphonucleocytes) will attack the invader using a respiratory burst of extracellular ROS from NADPH oxidase and produce a localised soup of dead organisms (lipoplysaccharide), damaged local lipids (oxLDL) and secreted long distance danger signals (ILs) to get the body in to peak defence mode. All activate the innate immune system. You can't afford to wait around for the 10 days it takes for the adaptive immune system to generate the antibodies needed to take over.

Indeed, once the cavalry arrive in the form of effective antibodies, it is actually time to turn down or off the innate immune response. So, while oxLDL floating around as a free entity indicates the need to get in to fight mode, when oxLDL is bound to an antibody this complex signals that the adaptive (antibody based) immune system, finally, has the situation under control. Innate immunity, ie inflammatory cytokines and insulin resistance, is no longer needed. There is negative feedback and NF-kB calms down.

Which is all well and good.

It just leaves open the question as to why an acute inflammatory response should generate insulin resistance. The trite answer that failure of an organism to develop insulin resistance during a severe infection could be serious. What happened to those organisms which, in the past, didn't do this? As Holly once said 


Why insulin resistance is essential to survival during an inflammatory process is a whole other question. Equally interesting, and related, is why corticosteroids, the most potent anti-inflammatory agents we have, also induce (equally essential) insulin resistance. Mediated by ROS.

It all goes back to Hoehn's paper


and the Protons view of fatty acid oxidation automatically generating ROS.

Nothing makes sense without it.

Peter

Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Insulin resistance (01) Dr Erol in Turkey

This paper

Insulin resistance is a cellular antioxidant defense mechanism

presents one of the most fundamental concepts necessary to understand what insulin resistance actually means. I may have mentioned this (many times) before.

If you read nothing else from this paper, the discussion is essential. It's short. Without understanding this concept there is no hope of understanding what insulin resistance really is and you are left with bizarre concept of trying to "cure" it. As the authors say:

"In summary, the fact that mitochondrial O2•− is upstream of IR is of major significance suggesting that IR may be part of the antioxidant defense mechanism to protect cells from further oxidative damage. Thus, IR may be viewed as an appropriate response to increased nutrient accumulation as originally suggested by Unger (32), representing part of the cells attempt to return to an energy neutral situation. This concept potentially changes our thinking concerning therapeutic modes of treating metabolic disease."

Aside: the plural possessive of cells is correctly cells'. I merely reproduce the error in the quote, along side my own many transgressions. Grind your teeth at will. End aside.

Especially:

"representing part of the cells attempt to return to an energy neutral situation"

Insulin resistance is adaptive. Almost always.

The paper was written in 2009.

The multiple authors represent a large, two-university group, with the to ability to finance lovely, detailed laboratory work. Where did so many people get this unlikely idea that insulin resistance is an adaptive defense against oxidative stress?

Well it certainly wasn't from me, back in 2009. Nowadays, maybe.

Could it have been from Adnan Erol?

Who?

He's the chap who wrote this paper:


in Bioessays, published in 2007, two years before the above paper.

It's hard to see who might have precedence here. The amount of lab work in the 2009 paper suggests that that work may have been ongoing before Erol's 2007 paper was published, but it's hard to say. I cannot find anywhere that Erol's work is cited in the 2009 paper, but that doesn't mean they haven't read it.

So what else has Erol published? It turns out that Erol is quite a common surname in Turkey. There are 270-ish hits if you just click on the author link in Erol's PubMed abstract. These include many different christian names, or perhaps I should say "given" names, in view of the part of the world from which Dr Erol hails.

Searching on "Adnan Erol" gives 27 hits. All appear to be the same author and all, at a glance, look deeply insightful. They are all single author papers.

He thinks for himself.

I get the impression that Adnan Erol is a medically educated/qualified chap in Mansia, Turkey, with a keyboard and access to PubMed. In possession of enquiring mind.

I empathise with him.

I also disagree with him in places. His concept that insulin resistance at the whole organism level is maladaptive is one such. Also, because he (understandably) lacks the Protons hypothesis of obesity, he has to fall back on the old thrifty genome concept to explain obesity through "over eating".

But his overall basic concept, yes. Ten out of ten.

Peter

Monday, July 28, 2025

Protons (82) Size matters

Here's the next paper:


I would suggest that the first of many problems with the paper is that it is using ob/ob and db/db mice. I don't know about ob/ob mice but in db/db mice we already know that obesity is only a feature of the genotype when linoleic acid is present in the diet at somewhere above 5% of calories. I discussed Valerie Reeves' PhD here. So the db/db mouse obesity phenoptype is really just a consequence of the poor ROS generation exemplified by linoleic acid. Offsetting this with stearic acid is 100% protective against obesity.

Think about that.

If anyone goes through the paper they will also note that the adipocytes from these mice which exhibit obesity under linoleic acid via low ROS generation are also under extreme oxidative stress, ie high ROS generation, during the process of dying. That's yet another post which will have to wait.
 
On the plus side this suggests that what we see in db/db mice has the potential to be relevant to what happens in D12942 fed bl/6 mice, which the group didn't use for their electron micrographs here. My bias is that db/db mice are remarkably similar to D12942 fed mice in their phenotype. Others may disagree.

So this is a scanning electron micrograph of the degenerating remains of an adipocyte from a db/db mouse:

















If anyone wants to go to the image in the paper, it is stunning. You can really, really zoom in.

The large spherical surface is the dying adipocyte. It still has a surface structure of some sort, which is covered in collagen fibrils. See images in Fig 4 for more beautiful microscopy of this. I would suggest that the collagen has been secreted by the macrophages, as they do,

Production of type VI collagen by human macrophages: a new dimension in macrophage functional heterogeneity

to maintain localisation of the large lipid droplet from the dead adipocyte while they deal with it. Okay, okay, here's an histo image from Fig 4, stained for collagen:





















and here's a scanning EM of the collagen fibrils on the surface of such an adipocyte, or its remains:


















If we go back to a selection of the scanning EM from the top of the post we can see, apparently oozing from the surface, are small lipid droplets (arrows), at least one of which (arrowhead) has been eaten by a macrophage. Each asterisk identifies a macrophage:



















We can get an idea of what happens to the lipids in these droplets from here:

Macrophages take up VLDL-sized emulsion particles through caveolae-mediated endocytosis and excrete part of the internalized triglycerides as fatty acids

Well, well, well. Macrophages release of FFAs from the (remains of) adipocytes, a process which, I very much expect, cannot be suppressed by insulin. Would anyone have any expectations as to whether this process, irrespective of any sort of johnny-come-lately-add-on cytokines, might *require* insulin resistance? Evolution builds on what was there already. With modifications.

Where do these FFAs end up if they can't be constrained within adipocytes, for what ever reason? In part they might, if you eat some carbohydrate, be pushed back in to other adipocytes and trigger even more CLS formation, more lipid release, more... Oh wait, week 16 of D12942 feeding looks like this!






















Of course the FFAs also end up, to a very large extent, in the liver when adipose cannot mop them up adequately. From the previous CLS paper again:

"However, under conditions of chronic HF feeding, eAT reduction could contribute to lipid overflow to the liver (Fig. 6), potentially exacerbating hepatic insulin resistance (50) or promoting steatohepatitis."

Here's Fig 6:









I look at CLS formation as the end stage of a failure of rising basal lipolysis to limit linoleic acid mediated adipocyte distension. It has the same consequences but more so.

Peter

Thursday, July 17, 2025

Protons (81) Crown like structures

Hyperinsulinaemia, while being unable to suppress basal lipolysis, is still able to facilitate uptake and storage of fatty acids within adipocytes. In this study the rats which were fed an high polyunsaturate diet were fatter and more hyperinsulinaemic than those fed higher saturate diet, all other aspects of the diets being constant.

Diet fat composition alters membrane phospholipid composition, insulin binding, and glucose metabolism in adipocytes from control and diabetic animals
















But when you take adipocytes out of the intact rat and ask how well they processed glucose, the high PUFA group adipocytes were *more* insulin sensitive.

















The metabolic milieux renders the live rats insulin resistant (elevated FFAs from increased basal lipolysis) while the individual adipocytes extracted from the rats are pathologically insulin sensitive. So the rats become fat and insulin resistant at the macroscopic level but retain insulin sensitivity at the adipocyte level when supplied FFAs are lowered to the tissue culture levels used.

Aside: There is now an on-line calculator which converts ng/ml of insulin to pmol/l insulin. Anyone who has had to convert grams to moles and then get the decimal point correct when converting to picomoles will understand.  Happy happy happy. 100ng/ml is 225pmol/l, a mild post prandial value. 1000ng/ml is 2250pmol/l, aggressive hyperinsulinaemic clamp levels. Most "ordinary" high insulin clamps use the highest post prandial levels of around 1000pmol/l, ie a bit less than half  highest values on the graph above. The above graph is close to physiology. End aside with happy dance.

To me this sets the scene that elevated plasma insulin, combined with enhanced insulin sensitivity at the adipocyte level, can successfully repackage lipids from basal lipolysis back in to adipocytes. That's Carpentier's idea in this paper, as in the last posts.

Increased postprandial nonesterified fatty acid efflux from adipose tissue in prediabetes is offset by enhanced dietary fatty acid adipose trapping

It is also quite possible to break adipocytes by doing this. We have two opposing processes. Enhanced translocation of glucose and fatty acids in to adipocytes under the failure to correctly resist insulin's storage signal, due to inadequate (but far from zero) ROS generation by linoleic acid. The second is the ability of distended adipocytes to release FFAs irrespective of insulin's action by enhanced basal lipolysis. This limits adipocyte size and supplies a competing substrate for insulin sensitive cells which requires the rejection of a certain amounts of glucose (ie insulin resistance) in proportion to the FFAs available from basal lipolysis.

Obviously excess storage, mediated via linoleic acid, wins. Otherwise there would be no linoleic acid mediated obesity. So when an adipocyte is at maximum size and there is a sudden surge in insulin/glucose/FFA availability then the adipocyte will attempt to get bigger. At some point it will fail.

Which leads me on to this D12492 mouse paper:


The photomicrographs are very pretty. The red arrows (placed by the authors) indicate "crown like structures" (CLSs). This is a simple H&E stained image of adipose tissue from a mouse after eating D12492 for eight weeks:






















The CLSs appear to be lipid droplets with thickened material surrounding them which looks a lot like cytoplasm. If you go on to use immunohistochemistry to label perilipin A, which labels the protein surrounding the lipid droplet in functional adipocytes, there isn't any. The numbers indicate individual CLSs. Golden brown indicates perilipin A, clearly stained in the (un-numbered) living adipocytes:
















If you stain the same section with F4/80, which picks out macrophages, you get this:
















which shows that what, on H&E, looks like s thick surround of adipocyte cytoplasm, is in fact a population of macrophages surrounding the remains of a dead adipocyte. Big Eaters. They are clearing up debris

This is the image from a mouse sacrificed after 12 weeks of eating D12942:






















and by week 16 we have this






















There are no adipocytes visible in this image. It's all crown-like structures. The authors have not placed arrows because they would need to be everywhere. By 16 weeks of the mice eating D12942 their adipose tissue is in crisis, many adipocytes are dead and there is a marked inflammatory response which is clearing up the debris.

By 20 weeks there is significant recovery of adipose architecture, presumably from a supply of stem cells/preadipocytes, but the formation of CLSs continues, a consequence of the continued feeding of D12942. This is the view at week 20 when the study ended:






















There is nothing tidy about the death of adipocytes during the formation of CLSs under D12942. The process is known as pyroptosis. I'm not sure how real pyroptosis might be, after all ferroptosis is a well recognised and well researched process which seems to be little more that linoleic acid intoxication. But assuming pyroptosis is real it is considered to be part of the innate immune system by which cells, when they have certain types of overwhelming infection, kill themselves. The process is messy.

Macrophages don't like mess. They get in there to sort it out. They also signal to the rest of the body that something is very wrong and it's time to optimise metabolic conditions to maximally enhance immune function.

Here's what it looks like if you immunostain the macrophages of CLSs for TNF-α or Il-6










Of course both of these cytokines will cause insulin resistance. Which is adaptive (another post there, you think the innate immune system does stupid things?). Not only in the surrounding adipocytes but also systemically. Which leaves a few open questions.

There are thinkers who surmise that adipose tissue inflammation is causal of insulin resistance and even that this insulin resistance, which generates hyperinsulinaemia, might be the actual cause of obesity. I know it sounds strange, but who knows? Everyone is welcome to their opinion.

Or we could hypothesis, as I do, that linoleic acid is the cause of insulin *sensitivity* which enhances insulin's storage signal (without inflammation) to the point where adipocytes die in association with over distension and there is then a massive inflammatory response as a secondary consequence.

There's a lot more to say about unhappy adipocytes and cytokines but I'll leave this post now by suggesting that the residual insulin resistance seen in IGT when FFAs are normalised by acipimox, as in here:


might be mediated by TNF-α, IL-6 and their kindred signaling molecules from CLSs.

Sadly even this may not be quite as simple as it sounds.

Peter

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Protons (80) The Carpentier Paradox (Carpentier III)

Preamble.

Direct quotes from Carpentier:

"Raglycerol, a marker of total AT lipolytic rate..."

"Plasma glycerol appearance was lower in IGT..."

"Postprandial palmitate appearance (Rapalmitatewas higher in IGT..."

If we combine the second two statements we can re write the findings as:

In people with IGT the rate of lipolysis is decreased (glycerol release) and simultaneously increased (FFA release) in the post prandial period.

A paradox. Oooh exciting! It would have made a great title for the paper.

So I wrote this post.






Just a one liner based on Tucker's link:

Obesity and metabolic perturbations after loss of aquaporin 7, the adipose glycerol transporter


If you knock out the glycerol/water transporter aquaporin 7 you get an obese mouse model, late onset.

This KO increases the glycerol content of adipocytes and, in all probability, drives the reaction

glycerol + ATP <-> glycerol-3-P + ADP

to the right, on the basis of increased glycerol concentration. The enzyme is glycerokinase.

This using a sledge hammer to move reaction kinetics and I doubt it has much to do with generic obesity.

But it does demonstrate that if you drive glycerol-3-phosphate formation you can drive obesity. Then comes this little snippet from the discussion:

"Lazar and coworkers demonstrated that thiazolidinediones markedly increased Gyk [Glycerokinase] mRNA level in adipocytes, resulting in triglyceride accumulation through enhancement of the conversion of glycerol into glycerol-3-P (21)."


The glitazones allow "futile" cycling of FFAs from triglycerides back in to triglycerides WITHOUT releasing the glycerol from the cell. Like aquaporin 7 KO mice but without all of that complicated genetic engineering.

Aside: "Futile" cycling is anathema to evolution. You either have an unavoidable thermogenic effect of an essential process, like protein catabolism, or you have a useful thermic effect like thermogenic uncoupling. The latter is derived from essential uncoupling to avoid damaging elevations of delta psi in mitochondria, wastefull but essential. Futile cycling without fulfilling a need or without an essential underlying process wastes energy which should be used to make babies. Survival of the fecundest is how it goes. "Futile" cycling is pathology. End aside.

So you cannot use glycerol release as an index of total lipolysis if subjects are taking glitazones to become fat. Oops, I mean to become insulin sensitive. Ah, is there any difference?

Which brings us right back to Carpentier's failure to discuss the *fall* in glycerol release from adipocytes concurrent with the *rise* in FFA release in the post prandial period.

Of course Carpentier's subjects weren't taking pharmaceutical activators of PPARγ.

But they were Canadians who had managed to eat sufficient linoleic acid to get themselves in to prediabetes.

Which begs the question: Is linoleic acid a glitazone mimetic? Well, no. But it generates functional PPARγ activators which *are* glitazone mimetics. You know, 9-HODE, 13-HODE and, of course, 4-HNE. All of which, at the correct concentration, would activate PPARγ and allow "futile" cycling of intra-adipocyte FFAs back to triglycerides without releasing their glycerol.

I'm embarrassed that I was unaware of this.

Carpentier is being paid a group leader's salary to be unaware of it. Also, who the hell scrutineered the paper?

Oops. And oops.

Peter

Monday, July 07, 2025

Protons (80) Carpentier II


I've been wanting to write about this paper for some time. But it annoys me. A lot.

Increased postprandial nonesterified fatty acid efflux from adipose tissue in prediabetes is offset by enhanced dietary fatty acid adipose trapping

I only realised yesterday that it is from Carpentier's group. Clearly Carpentier is asking questions about subjects which I am interested in. So it's time to say something.

First comes the title. From my point of view it absolutely concurs with what I would expect. If we accept that people have impaired glucose tolerance because they have accentuated lipid release from adipocytes (due to increased lipid droplet size necessitating elevated basal lipolysis), then storing lipid after a meal *should* increase FFA efflux from adipocytes. Make them big, they then "leak" (in a very controlled manner).

Carpentier used a very comprehensive tracer study to show that this effect is real and does occur (though they didn't look at, and clearly don't have, an hypothetical mechanism). The other finding they report is that this rise in efflux is not from chylomicrons spilling FFAs when they dock with extracellular lipoprotein lipase. The excess FFA efflux comes from adipocyte intracellular lipolysis.

This is consolidated in the first sentence of the abstract:

"The mechanism of increased postprandial nonesterified fatty acid (NEFA) appearance in the circulation in impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) is due to increased adipose tissue lipolysis..."

Both of which confirm my biases. Which makes me want to like the paper.

Here's the fly in the ointment, also from the abstract:

"Plasma glycerol appearance was lower in IGT (P = 0.01), driven down by insulin resistance and increased insulin secretion."

So.

The group is saying that they have documented elevated postprandial FFA efflux from adipocyte lipolysis in subjects with IGT. But they have NOT detected a rise in glycerol from that lipolysis. Quite the opposite.

What's it to be? More lipolysis giving elevated FFA efflux, or less lipolysis giving less glycerol efflux?

You can't have both at the same time. In the abstract and the discussion they are claiming that hyperinsulinaemia secondary to insulin resistance is suppressing glycerol release. But not suppressing (accentuated) FFA release.

Go figure.

So I've sat on the paper, because it confirms most of my biases but doesn't make sense.


The paper is important because, if their FFA flux data are believable, what they are saying is that adipocytes of people with IGT are releasing FFAs in the post prandial period, but there is, at the same time, enhance uptake of FFAs in to adipocytes.

In my terms: accentuated basal lipolysis, which is protective of adipocytes from over distention, is being offset by FFA uptake by adipocytes as a consequence of enhance insulin and insulin signalling secondary to linoleic acid's inability to resist it.

It matters because there is a battle over adipocyte size. When excessive insulin signalling wins over basal lipolysis, people get hurt. Especially their adipocytes do.

The downstream effects are not pretty.

Peter

Saturday, July 05, 2025

Protons (79) Define insulin resistance

It occurred to me while finishing the Carpentier post that it is a beautiful model of metabolic syndrome.

My definition of insulin resistance is an adaptive response to limit insulin-facilitated metabolic substrate ingress in to a cell when an alternative metabolic substrate is being utilised concurrently. With a few caveats.


This is exactly what Carpentier generated when he infused Intralipid/heparin to supply FFAs continuously during an hyperglycaemic clamp test. Look at the control group (open circles):


















With glucose clamped at 20mmol/l from 120min onward insulin eventually rises to ~700pmol/l which suppresses FFA availability toward the end of the clamp to around 0.050mmol/l or lower. At this point the subjects are running their metabolism almost completely on the glucose supplied by the infusion and FFAs are, appropriately, sequestered in to adipocytes.

The filled circles are the same people but this time, still with glucose clamped at 20mmol/l, they cannot suppress FFAs using insulin because the FFAs are being supplied exogenously using Intralipid. Free fatty acid release from adipocytes will still drop to near zero, as in the control situation, but plasma FFAs are artificially maintained exactly at fasting levels by the infusion.

The insulin resistance of fasting is real. This essential insulin resistance is not some "problem" to be "cured". It is the suppression of glucose uptake when fatty acid generated ROS are signalling that glucose is not needed, so insulin mediated glucose uptake is also not currently needed. Conveniently, this leaves glucose free for use by the brain.

Intralipid here supplies almost exactly the FFAs needed to imitate fasting (~0.70mmol/l) at a time when blood glucose is clamped at 20mmol/l and insulin is high. Resisting insulin under these circumstances is NOT pathology. It is purely adaptive. Fatty acids at 0.70mmol/l supply almost all of a subject's metabolic needs outside of the brain. Subjects do not need the glucose uptake which insulin and hyperglycaemia are trying to force on them. So they resist it. I would do the same.

You can "cure" this insulin "resistance" by turning off the lipid infusion. Probably in less than half an hour, extrapolating from Shulman's work.

So what goes wrong in metabolic syndrome?

The issue in metabolic syndrome is that you cannot turn off the supply of free fatty acids by pressing the stop button on an infusion pump full of Intralipid.

In metabolic syndrome the fatty acids are coming from adipocytes which are larger than they should be and as such have elevated basal lipolysis. We've all read this:

Effect of cell size on lipolysis and antilipolytic action of insulin in human fat cells

showing the effect of cell size on basal lipolysis:


















and the inability of insulin, even at preposterous dose rates, to suppress this lipolysis:


















So the (inappropriate) fatty acid supply to insulin sensitive cells in obesity *requires* insulin resistance. It is derived from large adipocytes, not small adipocytes (which have low rates of basal lipolysis), ie adipose hypertrophy necessitates insulin resistance while adipose hyperplasia does not. At the same fat mass.

Of course it is possible to stop free fatty acid release mediated through basal lipolysis using acipimox. Again, we've all read this one:

Overnight Lowering of Free Fatty Acids With Acipimox Improves Insulin Resistance and Glucose Tolerance in Obese Diabetic and Nondiabetic Subjects

and struggled to make out the numbers from its spectacularly low quality pdf file illustrations. I think I have the scales correct here:






The insulin tolerance is markedly improved, clearly, but is it not normal. Also, if you work through the rest of the paper, the mitochondria are still far from normal and I have absolutely no problem with adducts of 4-HNE and its relatives causing problems in their own right within the electron transport chain. They are, after all, an intrinsic part of both insulin's activation and deactivation pathways. I wouldn't ignore them. It's a whole series of potential posts about how and why they might be formed. Or not.

But to get back to metabolic syndrome. The obvious question is "Why are adipocytes so big as to be spilling FFAs through size-related elevated basal lipolysis in the first place?".

Insulin. Insulin makes small fat cells in to large fat cells. Stearate is the most effective fatty acid at generating the ROS signal which limits this, with palmitate a close second. Failure to limit insulin signalling, as neatly demonstrated by safflower oil in the Cocoa study, is what makes an adipocyte excessively insulin sensitive and subsequently engorged. With insulin resistance following on as a secondary change derived from the size of adipocytes.

Linoleic acid is a dud for limiting insulin signalling. It's the pathology.

Peter

Thursday, July 03, 2025

Protons (78) Carpentier

I went to Edinburgh for a CPD meeting and skipped social media for four days. I've come back ready to leave it alone for a while longer and to get back to doing some blogging.

Tucker and I have batted this paper, best known as the Carpentier Study, around by email in the past:

Acute enhancement of insulin secretion by FFA in humans is lost with prolonged FFA elevation

and it surfaced in my memory as no tweeted this on X:

"Considering you can use LA to quickly induce IR ... the answer is complicated."

Yes, it's complicated. Both correct and incorrect.

So here is Carpentier's graph of what happens when you use an hyperglycaemic clamp to 20mmol/l, ie the right hand side of the graph where the necessary infusion rate to achieve this concentration is illustrated:



















This is completely clear cut. Infusing Intralipid (~50% linoleic acid) for 48h up to and throughout the hyperglycaemic clamp markedly reduces the amount of glucose needed to maintain 20mmol/l in the blood, which signifies insulin resistance.

There are two fundamental problems here. The first is that the subjects were fed, throughout the 48h of the lead up to the clamp, a tightly controlled diet. The total number of calories is not specified but Tucker suggested from other papers by the same group that it was in the region of 2100kcal/d, designed to maintain weight stability.

This was fed either without the Intralipid or with the Intralipid, which provided an additional 1720kcal/24h, if it was included.

So in the "No Intralipid" arm the subjects were on a diet designed to maintain weight stability.

In the "Intralipid" arm the subjects were receiving 3820kcal/d, ie being calorically overloaded during the 48h leading up to the clamp.



















Anyone who has even superficially glanced at

Insulin resistance is a cellular antioxidant defense mechanism

will be aware that caloric overload absolutely *should* induce insulin resistance. Otherwise there would be reductive stress (too many calories entering insulin sensitive cells) leading to an excessively high delta psi and subsequent oxidative stress, ie excessive generation of reactive oxygen species. 

The control situation is very different to the Intralipid situation. They are utterly different on a overall calorie supply basis, which is fundamental to the essential adaptive nature of insulin resistance.

Okay.

The second problem (or beauty, next post) is the continuation of the infusion through the hyperglycaemic clamp. In the control situation the subjects were only receiving, intravenously, glucose at the steady state of the hyperglycaemic clamp. Around 200μmol/kg/min.

In the Intralipid arm they were receiving 40ml/h of Intralipid, ie 80kcal/h in addition to the glucose at ~130μmol/kg/min. It's beyond my willpower to convert the Intralipid supply to μmol/kg/min and we don't know the weights of the subjects anyway.

But Protons says that the calories from fat should cause enough insulin resistance to limit insulin facilitated glucose ingress to cells by an amount of calories equivalent to those supplied by the fat. This will happen with Intralipid or any other lipid emulsion, non of which was used, or was available at the time.

The issue Protons has with Intralipid is that it will not cause *enough* superoxide generation, by reverse electron transfer, to adequately resist insulin by the correct amount. If I smooth out the curves from Carpentier's paper we get this:


















and if I add in what I would expect an highly saturated fat infusion to produce, we would get this this:

















and if I wanted to be perverse I would predict this to be the effect of adding a safflower oil infusion (70% LA) with an even higher linoleic acid content than soybean oil:

















Of course this has not been done. What has been done is the Cocoa Study by Xiao (also with Carpentier as co-author) using oral rather than intravenous fats:

Differential effects of monounsaturated, polyunsaturated and saturated fat ingestion on glucose stimulated insulin secretion, sensitivity and clearance in overweight and obese, non-diabetic humans

which again used an hyperglycaemic clamp to 20mmol/l of glucose, which gives exactly what Protons would predict:

















The hypothesis that linoleic acid generates insulin resistance promptly, as a direct effect of the generation of reactive aldenhydes formed from linoleic acid in the bloodstream, is not supported by either of the Carpentier papers discussed here.

Far more plausible is the Protons hypothesis in which linoleic acid fails to generate the ROS signal and so fails to correctly limit insulin signalling.

The same ROS signal generates satiety in the brain stem. And it also limits the insulin mediated increase in the size of adipocytes. Linoleate oxidation absolutely causes insulin resistance. No doubt. Unfortunately it doesn't cause enough insulin resistance when compared to the normal physiological mix of palmitate, stearate and oleate.

"It's complicated" applies.

Peter



Luckily the lipid peroxidation hypothesis generates the same message as the Protons hypothesis, limit linoleic acid intake. Maybe it doesn't matter which is correct, excepting it's nice to have an explanation for Carpentier's work. I have to say that the simple message "Linoleate = badness", while beautifully simple, has limited explanatory power for studies like these. "It's complicated" hits the nail on the head.

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Scopinaro and biliarypancreatic diversion

The late Nicola Scopinaro was an interesting chap. I came across him while reading about the use of the biliarypancreatic diversion (BPD) operation for the management of obesity and diabetes. He developed the operation in the 1970s and produced a string of publications about it over around 40 years. He died in 2020.

I can appreciate his practical abilities. In an obituary a friend describes how, during a parachute malfunction in the 1970s, Scopinaro spent his time during the descent in working out how to best position himself on impact to minimise the probability of any of the 13 fractures he sustained leading to a penetrating injury of his abdominal or thoracic viscera, or brain. He survived, hitting the ground at ~100kph. So he can work things out. An impressively pragmatic person.

His operation works.

If anyone wants the details there is always Scopinaro's comprehensive (and possibly mildly biased) review from the early days here:


but the core is that it pretty well always works and while there can be catastrophic problems these can be relatively simply managed. Inject B vitamins sooner rather than later if your patient's brain malfunctions and perform revision surgery to increase the protein absorption section if they develop protein malnutrition. And a few others. All in the paper.

Here's what the operation does.






















If that's not clear we can analyse it in a little more detail. Most of the small intestine is separated from the stomach and is simply left in place to act as a conduit for bile salts and pancreatic juices to be transferred to the far end of the small intestine. We can remove this conduit from the diagram and replace it with the large red arrow like this:






















The last 250cm of the small intestine is plumbed directly to a truncated stomach and functions to absorb glucose and sucrose (using the brush border sucrase enzyme), highlighted in blue below:






















The conduit provided by the rest of the small intestine delivers the bile salts and pancreatic secretions to the last 50cm of small intestine. This 50cm section is the only section of the gut which is able to digest starch, fat and protein, that's the region highlighted in red:




















Under these condition it is impossible to overfeed using anything containing starch, fat or protein. People with this alteration to their digestive system usually eat around 3000kcal/d, with just under half of the food eaten going down the loo.

If you make them over-eat to a total of ~5000kcal/d by adding an extra 2000kcal of fat/starch there is absolutely no change to their weight over 15 days. I prefer not to think about the resulting changes to their already execrable lower bowel function during this period.

Here are the weight loss data from a case series who had a milder version of the above procedure. Roughly 70% loss initial excess weight (IEW) maintained for longer than 18 years:














The full operation as described above gives more like an 80% permanent loss of IEW.

You can develop all sorts of ideas about how this operation works physiologically, what bypassing the bulk of the small intestine does to GPL-1, GIP, vagal sectioning, endocananbinoids etc etc but the bottom line is that Scopinaro was a pragmatic surgeon and what he means by satiety and appetite may not be quite the same as I do.

Which puts us in a position to think about Tataranni's paper comparing BPD patients with normal weight people as regards insulin sensitivity and RQ. And maybe basal metabolic rate.

Peter

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:

                                        *****************

I happened on this paper by Edens and Friedman many years ago:

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."

Notice the word "overate" and that this was transient, then look at Figure 5, from which I've removed section B because that is just about the diabetic rats which are irrelevant to the current discussion:
















I think it is not unreasonable to draw a straight line through the calorie intakes, provided we ignore the upper trace of the corn oil fed rats (filled dots) in the section circled in blue, which are the ones we are interested in:
















NB the line trends downwards because the rats are slowing their growth rate so need fewer calories per day as the weeks go by.

Next we can look at the blue circled area and add in, by eye on Powerpoint, a smoothed line for the calorie intake during this period. Which looks like this, again in blue:















The 25% fat by weight diet supplied around 43% of calories as corn oil which gives around 24% of calories as linoleic acid.

We've seen something similar before of course, from the Schwartz lab:


















on to which we can draw a similar set of lines:



















I think exactly the same phenomenon is happening in both diets, one from 1984, the other from modern day D12942. The effect is much smaller and goes on for half the time period but it's there. These differences give us some insight in to what has been tweaked over the decades to improve the obesogneic nature of diets leading to the development D12942 and D12451.

Aside: The reason why the effect is small and the effect of MCT oils is minimal is another whole discussion. On the to-do list. End aside.

Is the 25% fat diet from 1984 going to be obesogenic when the rats only "overate" for a few days? Of course it is. Rats on D12942 only over eat for seven days before food intake drops to statistically indistinguishable from chow fed rats, but they still get slowly fatter over the weeks. So too would the rats in this venerable study, had they eaten it for long enough. IMNSVHO.

The discussion section is interesting because the authors are continuously trying to tease metabolic effects apart from "palatability" effects. That's good but the lack of concepts that insulin signalling is a redox based system and that the generation of superoxide/H2O2 is controlled by the relative proportion of FADH2 and NADH produced by a given metabolic substrate means that the conclusions must, necessarily, be far from complete.

So it lacks the Protons hypothesis and cannot tease out why a jump in linoleic acid intake causes a brief period of "overeating". And, of course, if you considered these few days of significantly increased caloric intake to be the only effect of the high fat corn oil diet you might be forgiven for concluding that polyunsaturated fats are non obesogenic The authors published in 1984 so cannot be criticised for being unaware that the redox state controls caloric ingress in to individual cells, as falls out from the appreciation of the ratio of FADH2 to NADH from fats vs carbohydrate as they affect the function of the ETC, RET and superoxide generation. Especially the effect of sub-physiological production of FADH2 per unit NADH as it features in the beta oxidation of linoleic acid.

Where as the difference in redox signalling generated by linoleate vs stearate (and to a lesser extent palmitate) has good explanatory power.

Peter