Altered intestinal functions and increased local inflammation in insulin-resistant obese subjects: a gene-expression profile analysis.
Veilleux. Alain A; Mayeur. Sylvain S; Bérubé. Jean-Christophe JC; Beaulieu. Jean-François JF; Tremblay. Eric E; Hould. Frédéric-Simon FS; Bossé. Yohan Y; Richard. Denis D; Levy. Emile E
Key Findings
- 195 intestinal genes differ between insulin‑sensitive and insulin‑resistant obese subjects, many tied to digestion, immunity, and cholesterol handling
- All inflammation and oxidative‑stress genes examined are higher in the intestine of insulin‑resistant individuals
- The humanin‑like gene (MTRNR2L1) is significantly up‑regulated in insulin‑resistant gut tissue
Practical Outcomes
- The rise in humanin‑like expression suggests the peptide may play a protective role in insulin‑resistant gut inflammation. While the study doesn’t give dosing or direct supplementation advice, biohackers might consider supporting gut health (e.g., anti‑inflammatory diets, pre‑/pro‑biotics) to modulate these pathways, and keep an eye on emerging humanin supplement research for potential metabolic benefits.
Summary
In severely obese people who are insulin‑resistant, the small intestine shows big changes in gene activity, especially more inflammation and stress‑related genes. One of the genes that goes up is a humanin‑like peptide (MTRNR2L1), which may be the body’s way of trying to protect against metabolic stress. The study doesn’t test humanin as a treatment, but it points to a link between gut inflammation, insulin resistance, and this peptide.
Abstract
Metabolic alterations relevant to postprandial dyslipidemia were previously identified in the intestine of obese insulin-resistant subjects. The aim of the study was to identify the genes deregulated by systemic insulin resistance in the intestine of severely obese subjects. Transcripts from duodenal samples of insulin-sensitive (HOMA-IR < 3, n = 9) and insulin-resistant (HOMA-IR > 7, n = 9) obese subjects were assayed by microarray (Illumina HumanHT-12). A total of 195 annotated genes were identified as differentially expressed between these two groups (Fold change > 1.2). Of these genes, 36 were found to be directly involved in known intestinal functions, including digestion, extracellular matrix, endocrine system, immunity and cholesterol metabolism. Interestingly, all differentially expressed genes (n = 8) implicated in inflammation and oxidative stress were found to be upregulated in the intestine of insulin-resistant compared to insulin-sensitive subjects. Metabolic pathway analysis revealed that several signaling pathways involved in immunity and inflammation were significantly enriched in differently expressed genes and were predicted to be activated in the intestine of insulin-resistant subjects. Using stringent criteria (Fold change > 1.5; FDR < 0.05), three genes were found to be significantly and differently expressed in the intestine of insulin-resistant compared to insulin-sensitive subjects: the transcripts of the insulinotropic glucose-dependant peptide (GIP) and of the β-microseminoprotein (MSMB) were significantly reduced, but that of the humanin like-1 (MTRNR2L1) was significantly increased. These results underline that systemic insulin resistance is associated with remodeling of key intestinal functions. Moreover, these data indicate that small intestine metabolic dysfunction is accompanied with a local amplification of low-grade inflammatory process implicating several pathways. Genes identified in this study are potentially triggered throughout the development of intestinal metabolic abnormalities, which could contribute to dyslipidemia, a component of metabolic syndrome and diabetes.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-09-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1186/s12876-015-0342-y
29
47