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Gluconeogenesis and risk for fasting hyperglycemia in Black and White women
Stephanie T. Chung, … , Morey W. Haymond, Anne E. Sumner
Stephanie T. Chung, … , Morey W. Haymond, Anne E. Sumner
Published September 20, 2018
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2018;3(18):e121495. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.121495.
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Research Article Metabolism

Gluconeogenesis and risk for fasting hyperglycemia in Black and White women

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Abstract

Black women, compared with White women, have high rates of whole-body insulin resistance but a lower prevalence of fasting hyperglycemia and hepatic steatosis. This dissociation of whole-body insulin resistance from fasting hyperglycemia may be explained by racial differences in gluconeogenesis, hepatic fat, or tissue-specific insulin sensitivity. Two groups of premenopausal federally employed women, without diabetes were studied. Using stable isotope tracers, [2H2O] and [6,62-H2]glucose, basal glucose production was partitioned into its components (gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis) and basal whole-body lipolysis ([2H5]glycerol) was measured. Indices of insulin sensitivity, whole-body (SI), hepatic (HISIGPR), and adipose tissue, were calculated. Hepatic fat was measured by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Black women had less hepatic fat and lower fractional and absolute gluconeogenesis. Whole-body SI, HISIGPR, and adipose tissue sensitivity were similar by race, but at any given level of whole-body SI, Black women had higher HISIGPR. Therefore, fasting hyperglycemia may be a less common early pathological feature of prediabetes in Black women compared with White women, because gluconeogenesis remains lower despite similar whole-body SI.

Authors

Stephanie T. Chung, Amber B. Courville, Anthony U. Onuzuruike, Mirella Galvan-De La Cruz, Lilian S. Mabundo, Christopher W. DuBose, Kannan Kasturi, Hongyi Cai, Ahmed M. Gharib, Peter J. Walter, H. Martin Garraffo, Shaji Chacko, Morey W. Haymond, Anne E. Sumner

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Figure 2

Basal rates of glucose and glycerol turnover in Black and White women.

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Basal rates of glucose and glycerol turnover in Black and White women.
U...
Using stable isotope tracers after a 10- to 12-hour overnight fast, we compared basal rates of (A) fractional gluconeogenesis (GNG) (boxes represent mean per group, with individual data points in Black women [gray squares, n = 24] and White women [white circles, n = 22]) and (B) glucose turnover (Ra), absolute GNG, glycogenolysis (GLY), and glycerol Ra (Tukey box plots) in Black women (gray, n = 24) and White women (White, n = 22). Top and bottom box limits represent the 75th and 25th percentile, respectively; midlines represent the median; and top and bottom whiskers represent the 75th percentile plus 1.5 of the interquartile range (IQR) and the 25th percentile minus 1.5 IQR, respectively. Black dots represent any values that lie outside the range of the whiskers. Groups were compared by unpaired Student’s t test. LBM, lean body mass.

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