Low-Dose Acrolein, an Endogenous and Exogenous Toxic Molecule, Inhibits Glucose Transport via an Inhibition of Akt-Regulated GLUT4 Signaling in Skeletal Muscle Cells
Journal
International journal of molecular sciences
Journal Volume
22
Journal Issue
13
Date Issued
2021-07-05
Author(s)
Abstract
Urinary acrolein adduct levels have been reported to be increased in both habitual smokers and type-2 diabetic patients. The impairment of glucose transport in skeletal muscles is a major factor responsible for glucose uptake reduction in type-2 diabetic patients. The effect of acrolein on glucose metabolism in skeletal muscle remains unclear. Here, we investigated whether acrolein affects muscular glucose metabolism in vitro and glucose tolerance in vivo. Exposure of mice to acrolein (2.5 and 5 mg/kg/day) for 4 weeks substantially increased fasting blood glucose and impaired glucose tolerance. The glucose transporter-4 (GLUT4) protein expression was significantly decreased in soleus muscles of acrolein-treated mice. The glucose uptake was significantly decreased in differentiated C2C12 myotubes treated with a non-cytotoxic dose of acrolein (1 μM) for 24 and 72 h. Acrolein (0.5-2 μM) also significantly decreased the GLUT4 expression in myotubes. Acrolein suppressed the phosphorylation of glucose metabolic signals IRS1, Akt, mTOR, p70S6K, and GSK3α/β. Over-expression of constitutive activation of Akt reversed the inhibitory effects of acrolein on GLUT4 protein expression and glucose uptake in myotubes. These results suggest that acrolein at doses relevant to human exposure dysregulates glucose metabolism in skeletal muscle cells and impairs glucose tolerance in mice.
Subjects
Akt; acrolein; glucose metabolism; glucose transporter; skeletal muscle
SDGs
Other Subjects
acrolein; glucose; glucose transporter 4; glycogen synthase kinase 3alpha; glycogen synthase kinase 3beta; mammalian target of rapamycin; protein; protein kinase B; protein p70; protein p70S6K; unclassified drug; acrolein; glucose; glucose transporter 4; protein kinase B; Slc2a4 protein, mouse; adult; animal experiment; animal model; animal tissue; Article; C2C12 cell line; controlled study; enzyme activity; gene overexpression; glucose blood level; glucose metabolism; glucose tolerance; glucose transport; human; human cell; in vitro study; in vivo study; male; mouse; myotube; nonhuman; protein expression; protein function; signal transduction; skeletal muscle cell; soleus muscle; active transport; animal; cell line; drug effect; glucose intolerance; Institute for Cancer Research mouse; insulin resistance; metabolism; skeletal muscle; skeletal muscle cell; Acrolein; Animals; Biological Transport, Active; Blood Glucose; Cell Line; Glucose; Glucose Intolerance; Glucose Transporter Type 4; Humans; Insulin Resistance; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred ICR; Muscle Fibers, Skeletal; Muscle, Skeletal; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt; Signal Transduction
Publisher
MDPI
Type
journal article