Reversing insulin resistance

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Researchers at Vanderbilt University have discovered how insulin crosses the capillary endothelium to exit blood vessels and stimulate skeletal muscle cells-a major finding that may lead to new ways to reverse insulin resistance, a hallmark of type 2 diabetes. This was made possible by the development of a novel microscopy technique which allowed measurement of insulin movement across the endothelial wall of skeletal muscle capillaries in the mouse.

One of insulin’s key functions is to stimulate glucose uptake by muscle, where it is stored or used as fuel. To stimulate glucose uptake insulin must cross the endothelial barrier into muscle tissue. Impaired delivery of insulin into tissue is a key feature of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.

Using a quantitative intravital fluorescence microscopy technique they developed combined mathematical modeling, the researchers showed that insulin moves across the endothelium by fluid-phase transport. Such movement is not dependent on the presence of endothelial insulin receptors or limited by saturation of endothelial transport processes, as had been hypothesized previously.

Better understanding of the variables controlling insulin movement across the endothelial wall could lead to improved strategies for reversing insulin resistance, including development of small molecules that enhance insulin delivery or novel insulin analogs that can access muscle more easily. The fluorescence microscopy technique developed for these studies can be applied to other drugs and hormones to study molecular access to a range of tissues.
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