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Department of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
It has been
reported that, unlike high-fat diets, high-sucrose diets cause insulin
resistance in the absence of an increase in visceral fat and that the
insulin resistance develops only in male rats. This study was done to
1) determine if isolated muscles of
rats fed a high-sucrose diet are resistant to stimulation of glucose
transport when studied in vitro and
2) obtain information regarding how
the effects of high-sucrose and high-fat diets on muscle insulin
resistance differ. We found that, compared with rat chow, semipurified
high-sucrose and high-starch diets both caused increased visceral fat
accumulation and insulin resistance of skeletal muscle glucose
transport. Insulin responsiveness of 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) transport
measured in epitrochlearis and soleus muscles in vitro was decreased
~40% (P < 0.01) in both male and
female rats fed a high-sucrose compared with a chow diet. The
high-sucrose diet also caused resistance of muscle glucose transport to
stimulation by contractions. There was a highly significant negative
correlation between stimulated muscle 2-DG transport and visceral fat
mass. In view of these results, the differences in insulin action in
vivo observed by others in rats fed isocaloric high-sucrose and
high-starch diets must be due to additional, specific effects of
sucrose that do not carry over in muscles studied in vitro. We conclude
that, compared with rat chow, semipurified high-sucrose and
high-cornstarch diets, like high-fat diets, cause increased visceral
fat accumulation and severe resistance of skeletal muscle glucose
transport to stimulation by insulin and contractions.
2-deoxyglucose; muscle contractions; high-starch diet
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