[HTML][HTML] Metabolic profiling of the response to an oral glucose tolerance test detects subtle metabolic changes

S Wopereis, CM Rubingh, MJ van Erk, ER Verheij… - PloS one, 2009 - journals.plos.org
S Wopereis, CM Rubingh, MJ van Erk, ER Verheij, T van Vliet, NHP Cnubben, AK Smilde
PloS one, 2009journals.plos.org
Background The prevalence of overweight is increasing globally and has become a serious
health problem. Low-grade chronic inflammation in overweight subjects is thought to play an
important role in disease development. Novel tools to understand these processes are
needed. Metabolic profiling is one such tool that can provide novel insights into the impact of
treatments on metabolism. Methodology To study the metabolic changes induced by a mild
anti-inflammatory drug intervention, plasma metabolic profiling was applied in overweight …
Background
The prevalence of overweight is increasing globally and has become a serious health problem. Low-grade chronic inflammation in overweight subjects is thought to play an important role in disease development. Novel tools to understand these processes are needed. Metabolic profiling is one such tool that can provide novel insights into the impact of treatments on metabolism.
Methodology
To study the metabolic changes induced by a mild anti-inflammatory drug intervention, plasma metabolic profiling was applied in overweight human volunteers with elevated levels of the inflammatory plasma marker C-reactive protein. Liquid and gas chromatography mass spectrometric methods were used to detect high and low abundant plasma metabolites both in fasted conditions and during an oral glucose tolerance test. This is based on the concept that the resilience of the system can be assessed after perturbing a homeostatic situation.
Conclusions
Metabolic changes were subtle and were only detected using metabolic profiling in combination with an oral glucose tolerance test. The repeated measurements during the oral glucose tolerance test increased statistical power, but the metabolic perturbation also revealed metabolites that respond differentially to the oral glucose tolerance test. Specifically, multiple metabolic intermediates of the glutathione synthesis pathway showed time-dependent suppression in response to the glucose challenge test. The fact that this is an insulin sensitive pathway suggests that inflammatory modulation may alter insulin signaling in overweight men.
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