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Dive into the research topics where João-Paulo G. Camporez is active.

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Featured researches published by João-Paulo G. Camporez.


Nature | 2014

Metformin suppresses gluconeogenesis by inhibiting mitochondrial glycerophosphate dehydrogenase

Anila K. Madiraju; Derek M. Erion; Yasmeen Rahimi; Xian-Man Zhang; Demetrios T. Braddock; Ronald A. Albright; Brett J. Prigaro; John L. Wood; Sanjay Bhanot; Michael J. MacDonald; Michael J. Jurczak; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Hui-Young Lee; Gary W. Cline; Varman T. Samuel; Richard G. Kibbey; Gerald I. Shulman

Metformin is considered to be one of the most effective therapeutics for treating type 2 diabetes because it specifically reduces hepatic gluconeogenesis without increasing insulin secretion, inducing weight gain or posing a risk of hypoglycaemia. For over half a century, this agent has been prescribed to patients with type 2 diabetes worldwide, yet the underlying mechanism by which metformin inhibits hepatic gluconeogenesis remains unknown. Here we show that metformin non-competitively inhibits the redox shuttle enzyme mitochondrial glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, resulting in an altered hepatocellular redox state, reduced conversion of lactate and glycerol to glucose, and decreased hepatic gluconeogenesis. Acute and chronic low-dose metformin treatment effectively reduced endogenous glucose production, while increasing cytosolic redox and decreasing mitochondrial redox states. Antisense oligonucleotide knockdown of hepatic mitochondrial glycerophosphate dehydrogenase in rats resulted in a phenotype akin to chronic metformin treatment, and abrogated metformin-mediated increases in cytosolic redox state, decreases in plasma glucose concentrations, and inhibition of endogenous glucose production. These findings were replicated in whole-body mitochondrial glycerophosphate dehydrogenase knockout mice. These results have significant implications for understanding the mechanism of metformin’s blood glucose lowering effects and provide a new therapeutic target for type 2 diabetes.


Nature Medicine | 2014

Leptin reverses diabetes by suppression of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis

Rachel J. Perry; Xian-Man Zhang; Dongyan Zhang; Naoki Kumashiro; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Gary W. Cline; Douglas L. Rothman; Gerald I. Shulman

Leptin treatment reverses hyperglycemia in animal models of poorly controlled type 1 diabetes (T1D), spurring great interest in the possibility of treating patients with this hormone. The antidiabetic effect of leptin has been postulated to occur through suppression of glucagon production, suppression of glucagon responsiveness or both; however, there does not appear to be a direct effect of leptin on the pancreatic alpha cell. Thus, the mechanisms responsible for the antidiabetic effect of leptin remain poorly understood. We quantified liver-specific rates of hepatic gluconeogenesis and substrate oxidation in conjunction with rates of whole-body acetate, glycerol and fatty acid turnover in three rat models of poorly controlled diabetes, including a model of diabetic ketoacidosis. We show that the higher rates of hepatic gluconeogenesis in all these models could be attributed to hypoleptinemia-induced activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, resulting in higher rates of adipocyte lipolysis, hepatic conversion of glycerol to glucose through a substrate push mechanism and conversion of pyruvate to glucose through greater hepatic acetyl-CoA allosteric activation of pyruvate carboxylase flux. Notably, these effects could be dissociated from changes in plasma insulin and glucagon concentrations and hepatic gluconeogenic protein expression. All the altered systemic and hepatic metabolic fluxes could be mimicked by infusing rats with Intralipid or corticosterone and were corrected by leptin replacement. These data demonstrate a critical role for lipolysis and substrate delivery to the liver, secondary to hypoleptinemia and HPA axis activity, in promoting higher hepatic gluconeogenesis and hyperglycemia in poorly controlled diabetes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Insulin-independent regulation of hepatic triglyceride synthesis by fatty acids

Daniel F. Vatner; Sachin Majumdar; Naoki Kumashiro; Max C. Petersen; Yasmeen Rahimi; Arijeet K. Gattu; Mitchell Bears; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Gary W. Cline; Michael J. Jurczak; Varman T. Samuel; Gerald I. Shulman

Significance The paradox of selective hepatic insulin resistance, wherein the insulin-resistant liver fails to suppress glucose production but continues to produce triglycerides, is central to the pathophysiology of type 2 diabetes. We hypothesized that hepatic triglyceride synthesis is regulated mostly by fatty acid delivery to the liver and independent of changes in hepatic insulin signaling. To examine this hypothesis, we used a novel LC-MS/MS method to measure rates of hepatic fatty acid esterification in vivo. In contrast to hepatic de novo hepatic lipogenesis, rates of hepatic esterification of fatty acids into triglyceride was primarily dependent on fatty acid delivery and independent of hepatic insulin action, providing an explanation for increased hepatic triglyceride synthesis in the presence of hepatic insulin resistance. A central paradox in type 2 diabetes is the apparent selective nature of hepatic insulin resistance—wherein insulin fails to suppress hepatic glucose production yet continues to stimulate lipogenesis, resulting in hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, and hepatic steatosis. Although efforts to explain this have focused on finding a branch point in insulin signaling where hepatic glucose and lipid metabolism diverge, we hypothesized that hepatic triglyceride synthesis could be driven by substrate, independent of changes in hepatic insulin signaling. We tested this hypothesis in rats by infusing [U-13C] palmitate to measure rates of fatty acid esterification into hepatic triglyceride while varying plasma fatty acid and insulin concentrations independently. These experiments were performed in normal rats, high fat-fed insulin-resistant rats, and insulin receptor 2′-O-methoxyethyl chimeric antisense oligonucleotide-treated rats. Rates of fatty acid esterification into hepatic triglyceride were found to be dependent on plasma fatty acid infusion rates, independent of changes in plasma insulin concentrations and independent of hepatocellular insulin signaling. Taken together, these results obviate a paradox of selective insulin resistance, because the major source of hepatic lipid synthesis, esterification of preformed fatty acids, is primarily dependent on substrate delivery and largely independent of hepatic insulin action.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Saturated and unsaturated fat induce hepatic insulin resistance independently of TLR-4 signaling and ceramide synthesis in vivo

Thomas Galbo; Rachel J. Perry; Michael J. Jurczak; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Tiago C. Alves; Mario Kahn; Blas A. Guigni; Julie Serr; Dongyan Zhang; Sanjay Bhanot; Varman T. Samuel; Gerald I. Shulman

Hepatic insulin resistance is a principal component of type 2 diabetes, but the cellular and molecular mechanisms responsible for its pathogenesis remain unknown. Recent studies have suggested that saturated fatty acids induce hepatic insulin resistance through activation of the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR-4) receptor in the liver, which in turn transcriptionally activates hepatic ceramide synthesis leading to inhibition of insulin signaling. In this study, we demonstrate that TLR-4 receptor signaling is not directly required for saturated or unsaturated fat-induced hepatic insulin resistance in both TLR-4 antisense oligonucleotide treated and TLR-4 knockout mice, and that ceramide accumulation is not dependent on TLR-4 signaling or a primary event in hepatic steatosis and impairment of insulin signaling. Further, we show that both saturated and unsaturated fats lead to hepatic accumulation of diacylglycerols, activation of PKCε, and impairment of insulin-stimulated IRS-2 signaling. These data demonstrate that saturated fat-induced insulin resistance is independent of TLR-4 activation and ceramides.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Anti-myostatin antibody increases muscle mass and strength and improves insulin sensitivity in old mice.

João-Paulo G. Camporez; Max C. Petersen; Abulizi Abudukadier; Gabriela V. Moreira; Michael J. Jurczak; Glenn Friedman; Christopher M. Haqq; Kitt Falk Petersen; Gerald I. Shulman

Significance Sarcopenia, or aging-associated muscle atrophy, increases the risk of falls and fractures and is associated with metabolic disease. Because skeletal muscle is a major contributor to glucose handling after a meal, sarcopenia has significant effects on whole-body glucose metabolism. Despite the high prevalence and potentially devastating consequences of sarcopenia, no effective therapies are available. Here, we show that treatment of mice with an anti-myostatin antibody for just 4 wk increased muscle mass and strength in both young and old mice. In old mice, this increase in muscle mass was accompanied by an improvement in muscle insulin sensitivity. These data provide support for myostatin inhibition as a potential therapeutic strategy for aging-associated sarcopenia and insulin resistance. Sarcopenia, or skeletal muscle atrophy, is a debilitating comorbidity of many physiological and pathophysiological processes, including normal aging. There are no approved therapies for sarcopenia, but the antihypertrophic myokine myostatin is a potential therapeutic target. Here, we show that treatment of young and old mice with an anti-myostatin antibody (ATA 842) for 4 wk increased muscle mass and muscle strength in both groups. Furthermore, ATA 842 treatment also increased insulin-stimulated whole body glucose metabolism in old mice, which could be attributed to increased insulin-stimulated skeletal muscle glucose uptake as measured by a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp. Taken together, these studies provide support for pharmacological inhibition of myostatin as a potential therapeutic approach for age-related sarcopenia and metabolic disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Genetic activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase alters oxidative substrate selection to induce skeletal muscle insulin resistance

Yasmeen Rahimi; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Max C. Petersen; Dominik Pesta; Rachel J. Perry; Michael J. Jurczak; Gary W. Cline; Gerald I. Shulman

Significance Defects in mitochondrial substrate selection, mediated by inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH), have been proposed to be a major contributor to lipid-induced muscle insulin resistance. To examine this hypothesis, we assessed insulin action in a genetic mouse model of constitutive PDH activation. Surprisingly, we found that preferential glucose oxidation in skeletal muscle in this mouse was accompanied by muscle insulin resistance. Muscle insulin resistance could be attributed to increased glucose oxidation at the expense of reduced fatty acid oxidation, leading to increased intramyocellular lipid accumulation and diacylglycerol-PKC-θ–mediated reductions in proximal insulin signaling. These findings have important clinical implications for novel antidiabetic therapies currently in development that activate PDH and enhance glucose oxidation in muscle. The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH) has been hypothesized to link lipid exposure to skeletal muscle insulin resistance through a glucose-fatty acid cycle in which increased fatty acid oxidation increases acetyl-CoA concentrations, thereby inactivating PDH and decreasing glucose oxidation. However, whether fatty acids induce insulin resistance by decreasing PDH flux remains unknown. To genetically examine this hypothesis we assessed relative rates of pyruvate dehydrogenase flux/mitochondrial oxidative flux and insulin-stimulated rates of muscle glucose metabolism in awake mice lacking pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 2 and 4 [double knockout (DKO)], which results in constitutively activated PDH. Surprisingly, increased glucose oxidation in DKO muscle was accompanied by reduced insulin-stimulated muscle glucose uptake. Preferential myocellular glucose utilization in DKO mice decreased fatty acid oxidation, resulting in increased reesterification of acyl-CoAs into diacylglycerol and triacylglycerol, with subsequent activation of PKC-θ and inhibition of insulin signaling in muscle. In contrast, other putative mediators of muscle insulin resistance, including muscle acylcarnitines, ceramides, reactive oxygen species production, and oxidative stress markers, were not increased. These findings demonstrate that modulation of oxidative substrate selection to increase muscle glucose utilization surprisingly results in muscle insulin resistance, offering genetic evidence against the glucose-fatty acid cycle hypothesis of muscle insulin resistance.


Nature Medicine | 2018

Metformin inhibits gluconeogenesis via a redox-dependent mechanism in vivo

Anila K. Madiraju; Yang Qiu; Rachel J. Perry; Yasmeen Rahimi; Xian-Man Zhang; Dongyan Zhang; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Gary W. Cline; Gina M. Butrico; Bruce E. Kemp; Gregori Casals; Gregory R. Steinberg; Daniel F. Vatner; Kitt Falk Petersen; Gerald I. Shulman

Metformin, the universal first-line treatment for type 2 diabetes, exerts its therapeutic glucose-lowering effects by inhibiting hepatic gluconeogenesis. However, the primary molecular mechanism of this biguanide remains unclear, though it has been suggested to act, at least partially, by mitochondrial complex I inhibition. Here we show that clinically relevant concentrations of plasma metformin achieved by acute intravenous, acute intraportal or chronic oral administration in awake normal and diabetic rats inhibit gluconeogenesis from lactate and glycerol but not from pyruvate and alanine, implicating an increased cytosolic redox state in mediating metformin’s antihyperglycemic effect. All of these effects occurred independently of complex I inhibition, evidenced by unaltered hepatic energy charge and citrate synthase flux. Normalizing the cytosolic redox state by infusion of methylene blue or substrates that contribute to gluconeogenesis independently of the cytosolic redox state abrogated metformin-mediated inhibition of gluconeogenesis in vivo. Additionally, in mice expressing constitutively active acetyl-CoA carboxylase, metformin acutely decreased hepatic glucose production and increased the hepatic cytosolic redox state without altering hepatic triglyceride content or gluconeogenic enzyme expression. These studies demonstrate that metformin, at clinically relevant plasma concentrations, inhibits hepatic gluconeogenesis in a redox-dependent manner independently of reductions in citrate synthase flux, hepatic nucleotide concentrations, acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity, or gluconeogenic enzyme protein expression.Using 13C-labeled substrates in vivo, this group shows that metformin inhibits mG3PDH to reduce hepatic gluconeogenesis and lower glycemia by altering the redox potential of the cytosol of hepatocytes rather than affecting substrate availability.


Diabetologia | 2014

Muscle-specific activation of Ca 2+ /calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IV increases whole-body insulin action in mice

Hui-Young Lee; Arijeet K. Gattu; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Shoichi Kanda; Blas A. Guigni; Mario Kahn; Dongyan Zhang; Thomas Galbo; Andreas L. Birkenfeld; François R. Jornayvaz; Michael J. Jurczak; Cheol Soo Choi; Zhen Yan; R. Sanders Williams; Gerald I. Shulman; Varman T. Samuel

Aims/hypothesisAerobic exercise increases muscle glucose and improves insulin action through numerous pathways, including activation of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases (CAMKs) and peroxisome proliferator γ coactivator 1α (PGC-1α). While overexpression of PGC-1α increases muscle mitochondrial content and oxidative type I fibres, it does not improve insulin action. Activation of CAMK4 also increases the content of type I muscle fibres, PGC-1α level and mitochondrial content. However, it remains unknown whether CAMK4 activation improves insulin action on glucose metabolism in vivo.MethodsThe effects of CAMK4 activation on skeletal muscle insulin action were quantified using transgenic mice with a truncated and constitutively active form of CAMK4 (CAMK4●) in skeletal muscle. Tissue-specific insulin sensitivity was assessed in vivo using a hyperinsulinaemic–euglycaemic clamp and isotopic measurements of glucose metabolism.ResultsThe rate of insulin-stimulated whole-body glucose uptake was increased by ∼25% in CAMK4● mice. This was largely attributed to an increase of ∼60% in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in the quadriceps, the largest hindlimb muscle. These changes were associated with improvements in insulin signalling, as reflected by increased phosphorylation of Akt and its substrates and an increase in the level of GLUT4 protein. In addition, there were extramuscular effects: CAMK4● mice had improved hepatic and adipose insulin action. These pleiotropic effects were associated with increased levels of PGC-1α-related myokines in CAMK4● skeletal muscle.Conclusions/interpretationActivation of CAMK4 enhances mitochondrial biogenesis in skeletal muscle while also coordinating improvements in whole-body insulin-mediated glucose.


Diabetologia | 2018

Angptl8 antisense oligonucleotide improves adipose lipid metabolism and prevents diet-induced NAFLD and hepatic insulin resistance in rodents

Daniel F. Vatner; Leigh Goedeke; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Kun Lyu; Ali R. Nasiri; Dongyan Zhang; Sanjay Bhanot; Susan F. Murray; Christopher D. Still; Glenn S. Gerhard; Gerald I. Shulman; Varman T. Samuel

Aims/hypothesisTargeting regulators of adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase could enhance adipose lipid clearance, prevent ectopic lipid accumulation and consequently ameliorate insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. Angiopoietin-like 8 (ANGPTL8) is an insulin-regulated lipoprotein lipase inhibitor strongly expressed in murine adipose tissue. However, Angptl8 knockout mice do not have improved insulin resistance. We hypothesised that pharmacological inhibition, using a second-generation antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) against Angptl8 in adult high-fat-fed rodents, would prevent ectopic lipid accumulation and insulin resistance by promoting adipose lipid uptake.MethodsANGPTL8 expression was assessed by quantitative PCR in omental adipose tissue of bariatric surgery patients. High-fat-fed Sprague Dawley rats and C57BL/6 mice were treated with ASO against Angptl8 and insulin sensitivity was assessed by hyperinsulinaemic–euglycaemic clamps in rats and glucose tolerance tests in mice. Factors mediating lipid-induced hepatic insulin resistance were assessed, including lipid content, protein kinase Cε (PKCε) activation and insulin-stimulated Akt phosphorylation. Rat adipose lipid uptake was assessed by mixed meal tolerance tests. Murine energy balance was assessed by indirect calorimetry.ResultsOmental fat ANGPTL8 mRNA expression is higher in obese individuals with fatty liver and insulin resistance compared with BMI-matched insulin-sensitive individuals. Angptl8 ASO prevented hepatic steatosis, PKCε activation and hepatic insulin resistance in high-fat-fed rats. Postprandial triacylglycerol uptake in white adipose tissue was increased in Angptl8 ASO-treated rats. Angptl8 ASO protected high-fat-fed mice from glucose intolerance. Although there was no change in net energy balance, Angptl8 ASO increased fat mass in high-fat-fed mice.Conclusions/interpretationDisinhibition of adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase is a novel therapeutic modality to enhance adipose lipid uptake and treat non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and insulin resistance. In line with this, adipose ANGPTL8 is a candidate therapeutic target for these conditions.


Cell Reports | 2018

Genetic Ablation of miR-33 Increases Food Intake, Enhances Adipose Tissue Expansion, and Promotes Obesity and Insulin Resistance

Nathan L. Price; Abhishek K. Singh; Noemi Rotllan; Leigh Goedeke; Allison Wing; Alberto Canfrán-Duque; Alberto Diaz-Ruiz; Elisa Araldi; Ángel Baldán; João-Paulo G. Camporez; Yajaira Suárez; Matthew S. Rodeheffer; Gerald I. Shulman; Rafael de Cabo; Carlos Fernández-Hernando

SUMMARY While therapeutic modulation of miRNAs provides a promising approach for numerous diseases, the promiscuous nature of miRNAs raises concern over detrimental off-target effects. miR-33 has emerged as a likely target for treatment of cardiovascular diseases. However, the deleterious effects of long-term anti-miR-33 therapies and predisposition of miR-33−/− mice to obesity and metabolic dysfunction exemplify the possible pitfalls of miRNA-based therapies. Our work provides an in-depth characterization of miR-33−/− mice and explores the mechanisms by which loss of miR-33 promotes insulin resistance in key metabolic tissues. Contrary to previous reports, our data do not support a direct role for SREBP-1-mediated lipid synthesis in promoting these effects. Alternatively, in adipose tissue of miR-33−/− mice, we observe increased pre-adipocyte proliferation, enhanced lipid uptake, and impaired lipolysis. Moreover, we demonstrate that the driving force behind these abnormalities is increased food intake, which can be prevented by pair feeding with wild-type animals.

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