Authors
Kitt Falk Petersen, Douglas Befroy, Sylvie Dufour, James Dziura, Charlotte Ariyan, Douglas L Rothman, Loretta DiPietro, Gary W Cline, Gerald I Shulman
Publication date
2003/5/16
Journal
Science
Volume
300
Issue
5622
Pages
1140-1142
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Insulin resistance is a major factor in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes in the elderly. To investigate how insulin resistance arises, we studied healthy, lean, elderly and young participants matched for lean body mass and fat mass. Elderly study participants were markedly insulin-resistant as compared with young controls, and this resistance was attributable to reduced insulin-stimulated muscle glucose metabolism. These changes were associated with increased fat accumulation in muscle and liver tissue assessed by 1Hnuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and with a ∼40% reduction in mitochondrial oxidative and phosphorylation activity, as assessed by in vivo 13C/31P NMR spectroscopy. These data support the hypothesis that an age-associated decline in mitochondrial function contributes to insulin resistance in the elderly.
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