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Nature Medicine 8, 731 - 737 (2002)
Published online: 17 June 2002 | doi:10.1038/nm724

Diet-induced insulin resistance in mice lacking adiponectin/ACRP30

Norikazu Maeda1, Iichiro Shimomura1,4, Ken Kishida1,5, Hitoshi Nishizawa1,5, Morihiro Matsuda1, Hiroyuki Nagaretani1, Naoki Furuyama1, Hidehiko Kondo1, Masahiko Takahashi1, Yukio Arita1, Ryutaro Komuro1, Noriyuki Ouchi1, Shinji Kihara1, Yoshihiro Tochino1, Keiichi Okutomi2, Masato Horie2, Satoshi Takeda2, Toshifumi Aoyama3, Tohru Funahashi1 & Yuji Matsuzawa1


Here we investigated the biological functions of adiponectin/ACRP30, a fat-derived hormone, by disrupting the gene that encodes it in mice. Adiponectin/ACRP30-knockout (KO) mice showed delayed clearance of free fatty acid in plasma, low levels of fatty-acid transport protein 1 (FATP-1) mRNA in muscle, high levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) mRNA in adipose tissue and high plasma TNF-alpha concentrations. The KO mice exhibited severe diet-induced insulin resistance with reduced insulin-receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1)-associated phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3-kinase) activity in muscle. Viral mediated adiponectin/ACRP30 expression in KO mice reversed the reduction of FATP-1 mRNA, the increase of adipose TNF-alpha mRNA and the diet-induced insulin resistance. In cultured myocytes, TNF-alpha decreased FATP-1 mRNA, IRS-1-associated PI3-kinase activity and glucose uptake, whereas adiponectin increased these parameters. Our results indicate that adiponectin/ACRP30 deficiency and high TNF-alpha levels in KO mice reduced muscle FATP-1 mRNA and IRS-1-mediated insulin signaling, resulting in severe diet-induced insulin resistance.


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