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Dive into the research topics where Attila Brehm is active.

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Featured researches published by Attila Brehm.


PLOS Medicine | 2007

Muscle mitochondrial ATP synthesis and glucose transport/phosphorylation in type 2 diabetes.

Julia Szendroedi; Albrecht Ingo Schmid; Marek Chmelik; Christian Toth; Attila Brehm; Martin Krssak; Peter Nowotny; Michael Wolzt; Werner Waldhäusl; Michael Roden

Background Muscular insulin resistance is frequently characterized by blunted increases in glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) reflecting impaired glucose transport/phosphorylation. These abnormalities likely relate to excessive intramyocellular lipids and mitochondrial dysfunction. We hypothesized that alterations in insulin action and mitochondrial function should be present even in nonobese patients with well-controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Methods and Findings We measured G-6-P, ATP synthetic flux (i.e., synthesis) and lipid contents of skeletal muscle with 31P/1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy in ten patients with T2DM and in two control groups: ten sex-, age-, and body mass-matched elderly people; and 11 younger healthy individuals. Although insulin sensitivity was lower in patients with T2DM, muscle lipid contents were comparable and hyperinsulinemia increased G-6-P by 50% (95% confidence interval [CI] 39%–99%) in all groups. Patients with diabetes had 27% lower fasting ATP synthetic flux compared to younger controls (p = 0.031). Insulin stimulation increased ATP synthetic flux only in controls (younger: 26%, 95% CI 13%–42%; older: 11%, 95% CI 2%–25%), but failed to increase even during hyperglycemic hyperinsulinemia in patients with T2DM. Fasting free fatty acids and waist-to-hip ratios explained 44% of basal ATP synthetic flux. Insulin sensitivity explained 30% of insulin-stimulated ATP synthetic flux. Conclusions Patients with well-controlled T2DM feature slightly lower flux through muscle ATP synthesis, which occurs independently of glucose transport /phosphorylation and lipid deposition but is determined by lipid availability and insulin sensitivity. Furthermore, the reduction in insulin-stimulated glucose disposal despite normal glucose transport/phosphorylation suggests further abnormalities mainly in glycogen synthesis in these patients.


Diabetes | 2007

The Mammalian Target of Rapamycin Pathway Regulates Nutrient-Sensitive Glucose Uptake in Man

Michael Krebs; Barbara Brunmair; Attila Brehm; Michaela Artwohl; Julia Szendroedi; Peter Nowotny; Erich Roth; Clemens Fürnsinn; Miriam Promintzer; Christian Anderwald; Martin Bischof; Michael Roden

The nutrient-sensitive kinase mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and its downstream target S6 kinase (S6K) are involved in amino acid–induced insulin resistance. Whether the mTOR/S6K pathway directly modulates glucose metabolism in humans is unknown. We studied 11 healthy men (29 years old, BMI 23 kg/m2) twice in random order after oral administration of 6 mg rapamycin, a specific mTOR inhibitor, or placebo. An amino acid mixture was infused to activate mTOR, and somatostatin-insulin-glucose clamps created conditions of low peripheral hyperinsulinemia (∼100 pmol/l, 0–180 min) and prandial-like peripheral hyperinsulinemia (∼450 pmol/l, 180–360 min). Glucose turnover was assessed using d-[6,6-2H2]glucose infusion (n = 8). Skeletal muscle biopsies were performed at baseline and during prandial-like peripheral hyperinsulinemia (n = 3). At low peripheral hyperinsulinemia, whole-body glucose uptake was not affected by rapamycin. During prandial-like peripheral hyperinsulinemia, rapamycin increased glucose uptake compared with placebo by 17% (Rd|300–360 min, 75 ± 5 vs. 64 ± 5 μmol · kg−1 · min−1, P = 0.0008). Rapamycin affected endogenous glucose production neither at baseline nor during low or prandial-like peripheral hyperinsulinemia. Combined hyperaminoacidemia and prandial-like hyperinsulinemia increased S6K phosphorylation and inhibitory insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) phosphorylation at Ser312 and Ser636 in the placebo group. Rapamycin partially inhibited this increase in mTOR-mediated S6K phosphorylation and IRS-1 Ser312 and Ser636 phosphorylation. In conclusion, rapamycin stimulates insulin-mediated glucose uptake in man under conditions known to activate the mTOR/S6K pathway.


Hepatology | 2009

Abnormal hepatic energy homeostasis in type 2 diabetes

Julia Szendroedi; Marek Chmelik; Albrecht Ingo Schmid; Peter Nowotny; Attila Brehm; Martin Krssak; Ewald Moser; Michael Roden

Increased hepatocellular lipids relate to insulin resistance and are typical for individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Steatosis and T2DM have been further associated with impaired muscular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) turnover indicating reduced mitochondrial fitness. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that hepatic energy metabolism could be impaired even in metabolically well‐controlled T2DM. We measured hepatic lipid volume fraction (HLVF) and absolute concentrations of γATP, inorganic phosphate (Pi), phosphomonoesters and phosphodiesters using noninvasive 1H/ 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy in individuals with T2DM (58 ± 6 years, 27 ± 3 kg/m 2), and age‐matched and body mass index–matched (mCON; 61 ± 4 years, 26 ± 4 kg/m 2) and young lean humans (yCON; 25 ± 3 years, 22 ± 2 kg/m 2, P < 0.005, P < 0.05 versus T2DM and mCON). Insulin‐mediated whole‐body glucose disposal (M) and endogenous glucose production (iEGP) were assessed during euglycemic‐hyperinsulinemic clamps. Individuals with T2DM had 26% and 23% lower γATP (1.68 ± 0.11; 2.26 ± 0.20; 2.20 ± 0.09 mmol/L; P < 0.05) than mCON and yCON individuals, respectively. Further, they had 28% and 31% lower Pi than did individuals from the mCON and yCON groups (0.96 ± 0.06; 1.33 ± 0.13; 1.41 ± 0.07 mmol/L; P < 0.05). Phosphomonoesters, phosphodiesters, and liver aminotransferases did not differ between groups. HLVF was not different between those from the T2DM and mCON groups, but higher (P = 0.002) than in those from the yCON group. T2DM had 13‐fold higher iEGP than mCON (P < 0.05). Even after adjustment for HLVF, hepatic ATP and Pi related negatively to hepatic insulin sensitivity (iEGP) (r =‐0.665, P = 0.010, r =‐0.680, P = 0.007) but not to whole‐body insulin sensitivity. Conclusion: These data suggest that impaired hepatic energy metabolism and insulin resistance could precede the development of steatosis in individuals with T2DM. (HEPATOLOGY 2009.)


Diabetes Care | 2009

Effects of High-Dose Simvastatin Therapy on Glucose Metabolism and Ectopic Lipid Deposition in Nonobese Type 2 Diabetic Patients

Julia Szendroedi; Christian Anderwald; Martin Krssak; Michaela Bayerle-Eder; Harald Esterbauer; Georg Pfeiler; Attila Brehm; Peter Nowotny; Astrid Hofer; Werner Waldhäusl; Michael Roden

OBJECTIVE—Statins may exert pleiotropic effects on insulin action that are still controversial. We assessed effects of high-dose simvastatin therapy on peripheral and hepatic insulin sensitivity, as well as on ectopic lipid deposition in patients with hypercholesterolemia and type 2 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We performed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, single-center study. Twenty patients with type 2 diabetes received 80 mg simvastatin (BMI 29 ± 4 kg/m2, age 55 ± 6 years) or placebo (BMI 27 ± 4 kg/m2, age 58 ± 8 years) daily for 8 weeks and were compared with 10 healthy humans (control subjects; BMI 27 ± 4 kg/m2, age 55 ± 7 years). Euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp tests combined with d-[6,6-d2]glucose infusion were used to assess insulin sensitivity (M) and endogenous glucose production (EGP). 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to quantify intramyocellular and hepatocellular lipids. RESULTS—High-dose simvastatin treatment lowered plasma total and LDL cholesterol levels by ∼33 and ∼48% (P < 0.005) but did not affect M, intracellular lipid deposition in soleus and tibialis anterior muscles and liver, or basal and insulin-suppressed EGP. In simvastatin-treated patients, changes in LDL cholesterol related negatively to changes in M (r = −0.796, P < 0.01). Changes in fasting free fatty acids (FFAs) related negatively to changes in M (r = −0.840, P < 0.01) and positively to plasma retinol-binding protein-4 (r = 0.782, P = 0.008). CONCLUSIONS—High-dose simvastatin treatment has no direct effects on whole-body or tissue-specific insulin action and ectopic lipid deposition. A reduction in plasma FFAs probably mediates alterations in insulin sensitivity in vivo.


European Journal of Radiology | 2010

Non-invasive assessment of hepatic fat accumulation in chronic hepatitis C by 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

Martin Krssak; Harald Hofer; Fritz Wrba; Martin Meyerspeer; Attila Brehm; Alfred Lohninger; Petra Steindl-Munda; Ewald Moser; Peter Ferenci; Michael Roden

BACKGROUND Liver biopsy is the standard method for diagnosis of hepatic steatosis, but is invasive and carries some risk of morbidity. AIMS AND METHODS Quantification of hepatocellular lipid content (HCL) with non-invasive single voxel (1)H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) at 3T was compared with histological grading and biochemical analysis of liver biopsies in 29 patients with chronic hepatitis C. Body mass index, indices of insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment index, HOMA-IR), serum lipids and serum liver transaminases were also quantified. RESULTS HCL as assessed by (1)H MRS linearly correlated (r=0.70, p<0.001) with histological evaluation of liver biopsies and was in agreement with histological steatosis staging in 65% of the patients. Biochemically assessed hepatic triglyceride contents correlated with HCL measured with (1)H MRS (r=0.63, p<0.03) and allowed discriminating between none or mild steatosis versus moderate or severe steatosis. Patients infected with hepatitis C virus genotype 3 had a higher prevalence of steatosis (62%) which was not explained by differences in body mass or whole body insulin resistance. When these patients were excluded from correlation analysis, hepatic fat accumulation positively correlated with insulin resistance in the remaining hepatitis C patients (HCL vs. HOMA-IR, r=0.559, p<0.020, n=17). CONCLUSION Localized (1)H MRS is a valid and useful method for quantification of HCL content in patients with chronic hepatitis C and can be easily applied to non-invasively monitoring of steatosis during repeated follow-up measurements in a clinical setting.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Acute elevation of plasma lipids does not affect ATP synthesis in human skeletal muscle

Attila Brehm; Martin Krssak; Albrecht Ingo Schmid; Peter Nowotny; Werner Waldhäusl; Michael Roden

Prolonged elevation of plasma triglycerides and free fatty acids (FFA) reduces insulin-stimulated glucose disposal and myocellular flux through ATP synthase (fATPase). However, the early effects of lipids per se on fATPase are as yet unclear. Thus, this study examined glucose disposal and fATPase during 3 h of FFA elevation in the presence of low plasma insulinemia. Euglycemic pancreatic clamps with low-dose insulin supplementation (6 mU.m body surface area(-2).min(-1)) were performed in eight healthy men with (LIP) or without (CON) lipid infusion to measure whole body glucose disposal. (31)P/(1)H magnetic resonance spectroscopy of calf muscle was applied to quantify fATPase and concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate (G6P), inorganic phosphate (P(i)), phosphocreatine (PCr), ADP, pH, and IMCL before and during the clamps. Lipid infusion increased plasma FFA approximately twofold and decreased glucose disposal by approximately 50% (110-180 min: LIP 0.87 +/- 0.45 vs. CON 1.75 +/- 0.42 mg.kg(-1).min(-1), P = 0.002; means +/- SD). Intramyocellular G6P tended to rise only under control conditions, whereas PCr, ADP, pH, and IMCL remained unchanged from fasting in LIP and CON. Although P(i) concentrations increased by approximately 18%, fATPase remained unchanged from fasting during the clamps (LIP 10.2 +/- 2.2 vs. CON 10.5 +/- 2.6 micromol.g muscle(-1).min(-1), P = not significant). We conclude that 3 h of lipid elevation fail to affect ATP synthesis despite marked reduction of whole body glucose uptake. This suggests that lipid-induced insulin resistance results primarily from mechanisms decreasing glucose uptake rather than from direct interference of fatty acid metabolites with mitochondrial function.


Diabetes Care | 2014

Lower Fasting Muscle Mitochondrial Activity Relates to Hepatic Steatosis in Humans

Julia Szendroedi; Kirti Kaul; Lisa Kloock; Klaus Straßburger; Albrecht Ingo Schmid; Marek Chmelik; Michaela Kacerovsky; Gertrud Kacerovsky-Bielesz; Thomas Prikoszovich; Attila Brehm; Martin Krssak; Stephan Gruber; Michael Krebs; Alexandra Kautzky-Willer; Ewald Moser; Giovanni Pacini; Michael Roden

OBJECTIVE Muscle insulin resistance has been implicated in the development of steatosis and dyslipidemia by changing the partitioning of postprandial substrate fluxes. Also, insulin resistance may be due to reduced mitochondrial function. We examined the association between mitochondrial activity, insulin sensitivity, and steatosis in a larger human population. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We analyzed muscle mitochondrial activity from ATP synthase flux (fATP) and ectopic lipids by multinuclei magnetic resonance spectroscopy from 113 volunteers with and without diabetes. Insulin sensitivity was assessed from M values using euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamps and/or from oral glucose insulin sensitivity (OGIS) using oral glucose tolerance tests. RESULTS Muscle fATP correlated negatively with hepatic lipid content and HbA1c. After model adjustment for study effects and other confounders, fATP showed a strong negative correlation with hepatic lipid content and a positive correlation with insulin sensitivity and fasting C-peptide. The negative correlation of muscle fATP with age, HbA1c, and plasma free fatty acids was weakened after adjustment. Body mass, muscle lipid contents, plasma lipoproteins, and triglycerides did not associate with fATP. CONCLUSIONS The association of impaired muscle mitochondrial activity with hepatic steatosis supports the concept of a close link between altered muscle and liver energy metabolism as early abnormalities promoting insulin resistance.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2006

Cerebral glutamate metabolism during hypoglycaemia in healthy and type 1 diabetic humans

Martin G. Bischof; Attila Brehm; Elisabeth Bernroider; Martin Krssak; Vladimir Mlynarik; Michael Krebs; Michael Roden

Background  The mechanisms responsible for the progressive failure of hypoglycaemia counterregulation in long‐standing type 1 diabetes are poorly understood. Increased brain glucose uptake during hypoglycaemia or alterations of brain energy metabolism could effect glucose sensing by the brain and thus contribute to hypoglycaemia‐associated autonomic failure.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2016

Glucose uptake saturation explains glucose kinetics profiles measured by different tests

Roberto Bizzotto; Andrea Natali; Amalia Gastaldelli; Elza Muscelli; Martin Krssak; Attila Brehm; Michael Roden; Ele Ferrannini; Andrea Mari

It is known that for a given insulin level glucose clearance depends on glucose concentration. However, a quantitative representation of the concomitant effects of hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia on glucose clearance, necessary to describe heterogeneous tests such as euglycemic and hyperglycemic clamps and oral tests, is lacking. Data from five studies (123 subjects) using a glucose tracer and including all the above tests in normal and diabetic subjects were collected. A mathematical model was developed in which glucose utilization was represented as a Michaelis-Menten function of glucose with constant Km and insulin-controlled Vmax, consistently with the basic notions of glucose transport. Individual values for the model parameters were estimated using a population approach. Tracer data were accurately fitted in all tests. The estimated Km was 3.88 (2.83-5.32) mmol/l [median (interquartile range)]. Median model-derived glucose clearance at 600 pmol/l insulin was reduced from 246 to 158 ml·min(-1)·m(-2) when glucose was raised from 5 to 10 mmol/l. The model reproduced the characteristic lack of increase in glucose clearance when moderate hyperinsulinemia was accompanied by hyperglycemia. In all tests, insulin sensitivity was inversely correlated with BMI, as expected (R(2) = 0.234, P = 0.0001). In conclusion, glucose clearance in euglycemic and hyperglycemic clamps and oral tests can be described with a unifying model, consistent with the notions of glucose transport and able to reproduce the suppression of glucose clearance due to hyperglycemia observed in previous studies. The model may be important for the design of reliable glucose homeostasis simulators.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2014

Modeling glucose and free fatty acid kinetics during insulin-modified intravenous glucose tolerance test in healthy humans: role of counterregulatory response.

Karl Thomaseth; Attila Brehm; Alessandra Pavan; Giovanni Pacini; Michael Roden

Insulin administration during insulin-modified intravenous glucose tolerance test (IM-IVGTT) can induce transient hypoglycemia in healthy insulin-sensitive subjects. This triggers counterregulatory reflex (CRR) responses, which influence the kinetics of glucose and nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA), and undermines the accuracy of mathematical modeling methods that do not explicitly account for CRR. The aim of this study is to evaluate mathematical models of glucose and NEFA kinetics against experimental data in the presence or absence of CRR. Thirteen healthy nondiabetic subjects underwent a standard IM-IVGTT and a modified test (GC-IM-IVGTT) with a variable glucose infusion preventing hypoglycemia. While model predictions fit very well with glucose and NEFA data from GC-IM-IVGTT, they lagged behind observations from IM-IVGTT during recovery from hypoglycemia, independently of insulinemia, which did not differ significantly between protocols. A modification to the glucose minimal model, using the glucose concentration below a threshold as a signal for CRR, improves model predictions for both glucose and NEFA. The associated increase in endogenous glucose production correlates, among various CRR hormones, mainly with the dynamics of glucagon concentration. The modified minimal models introduce new parameters that quantify strength and duration of CRR following hypoglycemia. Although CRR represents an unwanted side-effect in IM-IVGTT occurring only in insulin-sensitive subjects, this study provides new insights leading to improved procedures for estimating insulin sensitivity from IM-IVGTT, which may also allow for assessing the individual capacity of recovery from hypoglycemic events in patients treated with insulin or insulin-releasing drugs.

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Michael Roden

University of Düsseldorf

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Peter Nowotny

Medical University of Vienna

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Martin Krssak

Medical University of Vienna

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Werner Waldhäusl

Medical University of Vienna

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Michael Krebs

Medical University of Vienna

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Albrecht Ingo Schmid

Medical University of Vienna

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Christian Anderwald

Medical University of Vienna

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Ewald Moser

Medical University of Vienna

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