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Insulin exits skeletal muscle capillaries by fluid-phase transport
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Before insulin can stimulate myocytes to take up glucose, it must first move from the circulation to the interstitial space. The continuous endothelium of skeletal muscle (SkM) capillaries restricts insulin's access to myocytes. The mechanism by which insulin crosses this continuous endothelium is critical to understand insulin action and insulin resistance; however, methodological obstacles have limited understanding of endothelial insulin transport in vivo. Here, we present an intravital microscopy technique to measure the rate of insulin efflux across the endothelium of SkM capillaries. This method involves development of a fully bioactive, fluorescent insulin probe, a gastrocnemius preparation for intravital microscopy, an automated vascular segmentation algorithm, and the use of mathematical models to estimate endothelial transport parameters. We combined direct visualization of insulin efflux from SkM capillaries with modeling of insulin efflux kinetics to identify fluid-phase transport as the major mode of transendothelial insulin efflux in mice. Model-independent experiments demonstrating that insulin movement is neither saturable nor affected by insulin receptor antagonism supported this result. Our finding that insulin enters the SkM interstitium by fluid-phase transport may have implications in the pathophysiology of SkM insulin resistance as well as in the treatment of diabetes with various insulin analogs.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Male
Endothelium
Intravital Microscopy
medicine.medical_treatment
03 medical and health sciences
Mice
Insulin resistance
Antigens, CD
Diabetes mellitus
Hyperinsulinism
medicine
Diabetes Mellitus
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Myocyte
Animals
Humans
Insulin
Muscle, Skeletal
biology
Chemistry
Rhodamines
Skeletal muscle
Biological Transport
General Medicine
Models, Theoretical
medicine.disease
Receptor, Insulin
Cell biology
Capillaries
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Insulin receptor
Kinetics
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Glucose
biology.protein
Glucose Clamp Technique
Intravital microscopy
Research Article
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....fef07179bbfe627fe23bf2fbb4ca2111