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Dive into the research topics where Max C. Petersen is active.

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Featured researches published by Max C. Petersen.


Endocrinology | 2013

Cellular mechanisms by which FGF21 improves insulin sensitivity in male mice.

Joao Paulo Camporez; François R. Jornayvaz; Max C. Petersen; Dominik Pesta; Blas A. Guigni; Julie Serr; Dongyan Zhang; Mario Kahn; Varman T. Samuel; Michael J. Jurczak; Gerald I. Shulman

Fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) is a potent regulator of glucose and lipid metabolism and is currently being pursued as a therapeutic agent for insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. However, the cellular mechanisms by which FGF21 modifies insulin action in vivo are unclear. To address this question, we assessed insulin action in regular chow- and high-fat diet (HFD)-fed wild-type mice chronically infused with FGF21 or vehicle. Here, we show that FGF21 administration results in improvements in both hepatic and peripheral insulin sensitivity in both regular chow- and HFD-fed mice. This improvement in insulin responsiveness in FGF21-treated HFD-fed mice was associated with decreased hepatocellular and myocellular diacylglycerol content and reduced protein kinase Cε activation in liver and protein kinase Cθ in skeletal muscle. In contrast, there were no effects of FGF21 on liver or muscle ceramide content. These effects may be attributed, in part, to increased energy expenditure in the liver and white adipose tissue. Taken together, these data provide a mechanism by which FGF21 protects mice from lipid-induced liver and muscle insulin resistance and support its development as a novel therapy for the treatment of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, insulin resistance, and type 2 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.


Nature Reviews Endocrinology | 2017

Regulation of hepatic glucose metabolism in health and disease

Max C. Petersen; Daniel F. Vatner; Gerald I. Shulman

The liver is crucial for the maintenance of normal glucose homeostasis — it produces glucose during fasting and stores glucose postprandially. However, these hepatic processes are dysregulated in type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus, and this imbalance contributes to hyperglycaemia in the fasted and postprandial states. Net hepatic glucose production is the summation of glucose fluxes from gluconeogenesis, glycogenolysis, glycogen synthesis, glycolysis and other pathways. In this Review, we discuss the in vivo regulation of these hepatic glucose fluxes. In particular, we highlight the importance of indirect (extrahepatic) control of hepatic gluconeogenesis and direct (hepatic) control of hepatic glycogen metabolism. We also propose a mechanism for the progression of subclinical hepatic insulin resistance to overt fasting hyperglycaemia in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Insights into the control of hepatic gluconeogenesis by metformin and insulin and into the role of lipid-induced hepatic insulin resistance in modifying gluconeogenic and net hepatic glycogen synthetic flux are also discussed. Finally, we consider the therapeutic potential of strategies that target hepatosteatosis, hyperglucagonaemia and adipose lipolysis.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

Insulin receptor Thr1160 phosphorylation mediates lipid-induced hepatic insulin resistance

Max C. Petersen; Anila K. Madiraju; Brandon M. Gassaway; Michael Marcel; Ali R. Nasiri; Gina M. Butrico; Melissa Marcucci; Dongyan Zhang; Abudukadier Abulizi; Xian-Man Zhang; William M. Philbrick; Stevan R. Hubbard; Michael J. Jurczak; Varman T. Samuel; Jesse Rinehart; Gerald I. Shulman

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a risk factor for type 2 diabetes (T2D), but whether NAFLD plays a causal role in the pathogenesis of T2D is uncertain. One proposed mechanism linking NAFLD to hepatic insulin resistance involves diacylglycerol-mediated (DAG-mediated) activation of protein kinase C-ε (PKCε) and the consequent inhibition of insulin receptor (INSR) kinase activity. However, the molecular mechanism underlying PKCε inhibition of INSR kinase activity is unknown. Here, we used mass spectrometry to identify the phosphorylation site Thr1160 as a PKCε substrate in the functionally critical INSR kinase activation loop. We hypothesized that Thr1160 phosphorylation impairs INSR kinase activity by destabilizing the active configuration of the INSR kinase, and our results confirmed this prediction by demonstrating severely impaired INSR kinase activity in phosphomimetic T1160E mutants. Conversely, the INSR T1160A mutant was not inhibited by PKCε in vitro. Furthermore, mice with a threonine-to-alanine mutation at the homologous residue Thr1150 (InsrT1150A mice) were protected from high fat diet-induced hepatic insulin resistance. InsrT1150A mice also displayed increased insulin signaling, suppression of hepatic glucose production, and increased hepatic glycogen synthesis compared with WT controls during hyperinsulinemic clamp studies. These data reveal a critical pathophysiological role for INSR Thr1160 phosphorylation and provide further mechanistic links between PKCε and INSR in mediating NAFLD-induced hepatic insulin resistance.


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.


Trends in Pharmacological Sciences | 2017

Roles of Diacylglycerols and Ceramides in Hepatic Insulin Resistance

Max C. Petersen; Gerald I. Shulman

Although ample evidence links hepatic lipid accumulation with hepatic insulin resistance, the mechanistic basis of this association is incompletely understood and controversial. Diacylglycerols (DAGs) and ceramides have emerged as the two best-studied putative mediators of lipid-induced hepatic insulin resistance. Both lipids were first associated with insulin resistance in skeletal muscle and were subsequently hypothesized to mediate insulin resistance in the liver. However, the putative roles for DAGs and ceramides in hepatic insulin resistance have proved more complex than originally imagined, with various genetic and pharmacologic manipulations yielding a vast and occasionally contradictory trove of data to sort. In this review we examine the state of this field, turning a critical eye toward both DAGs and ceramides as putative mediators of lipid-induced hepatic insulin resistance.


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.


The Journal of Physiology | 2016

CrossTalk opposing view: Intramyocellular ceramide accumulation does not modulate insulin resistance.

Max C. Petersen; Michael J. Jurczak

The hypothesis that dysregulated lipid metabolism contributes to insulin resistance in muscle is now over a half-century old (Randle et al. 1963). Although early work implicated reciprocal allosteric regulation of glucose and fat oxidation as a mechanism for lipid-induced impairments in glucose metabolism (Randle et al. 1963), more recent studies propose that distinct lipid species with signalling properties directly interfere with the insulin signalling cascade to produce insulin resistance (Shulman, 2014). Of the many lipid metabolites proposed to cause insulin resistance, the ceramides have received particular attention. Early studies demonstrating a relationship between intracellular ceramide levels and insulin resistance were performed in cell culture; the addition of palmitate or cellpermeant short-chain ceramides to the culture medium, often at supraphysiological concentrations, was repeatedly shown to impair insulin action (Summers et al.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2015

ApoA5 knockdown improves whole-body insulin sensitivity in high-fat-fed mice by reducing ectopic lipid content.

Joao Paulo Camporez; Shoichi Kanda; Max C. Petersen; François R. Jornayvaz; Varman T. Samuel; Sanjay Bhanot; Kitt Falk Petersen; Michael J. Jurczak; Gerald I. Shulman

ApoA5 has a critical role in the regulation of plasma TG concentrations. In order to determine whether ApoA5 also impacts ectopic lipid deposition in liver and skeletal muscle, as well as tissue insulin sensitivity, we treated mice with an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) to decrease hepatic expression of ApoA5. ASO treatment reduced ApoA5 protein expression in liver by 60–70%. ApoA5 ASO-treated mice displayed approximately 3-fold higher plasma TG concentrations, which were associated with decreased plasma TG clearance. Furthermore, ApoA5 ASO-treated mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD) exhibited reduced liver and skeletal muscle TG uptake and reduced liver and muscle TG and diacylglycerol (DAG) content. HFD-fed ApoA5 ASO-treated mice were protected from HFD-induced insulin resistance, as assessed by hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamps. This protection could be attributed to increases in both hepatic and peripheral insulin responsiveness associated with decreased DAG activation of protein kinase C (PKC)-ε and PKCθ in liver and muscle, respectively, and increased insulin-stimulated AKT2 phosphorylation in these tissues. In summary, these studies demonstrate a novel role for ApoA5 as a modulator of susceptibility to diet-induced liver and muscle insulin resistance through regulation of ectopic lipid accumulation in liver and skeletal muscle.


Nature Communications | 2016

MARCH1 regulates insulin sensitivity by controlling cell surface insulin receptor levels.

Arvindhan Nagarajan; Max C. Petersen; Ali R. Nasiri; Gina M. Butrico; Annie Fung; Hai Bin Ruan; Romy Kursawe; Sonia Caprio; Jacques Thibodeau; Marie Claude Bourgeois-Daigneault; Lisha Sun; Guangping Gao; Sanjay Bhanot; Michael J. Jurczak; Michael R. Green; Gerald I. Shulman; Narendra Wajapeyee

Insulin resistance is a key driver of type 2 diabetes (T2D) and is characterized by defective insulin receptor (INSR) signalling. Although surface INSR downregulation is a well-established contributor to insulin resistance, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain obscure. Here we show that the E3 ubiquitin ligase MARCH1 impairs cellular insulin action by degrading cell surface INSR. Using a large-scale RNA interference screen, we identify MARCH1 as a negative regulator of INSR signalling. March1 loss-of-function enhances, and March1 overexpression impairs, hepatic insulin sensitivity in mice. MARCH1 ubiquitinates INSR to decrease cell surface INSR levels, but unlike other INSR ubiquitin ligases, MARCH1 acts in the basal state rather than after insulin stimulation. Thus, MARCH1 may help set the basal gain of insulin signalling. MARCH1 expression is increased in white adipose tissue of obese humans, suggesting that MARCH1 contributes to the pathophysiology of T2D and could be a new therapeutic target.

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