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Vol. 293, Issue 2, 487-493, May 2000


Troglitazone Directly Inhibits CO2 Production from Glucose and Palmitate in Isolated Rat Skeletal Muscle1

Clemens Fürnsinn, Barbara Brunmair, Susanne Neschen, Michael Roden and Werner Waldhäusl

Department of Medicine III, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria


    Abstract
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Troglitazone is a nuclear peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma agonist with insulin-sensitizing properties that has been introduced for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. To further elucidate its mechanism of action, this study examined direct troglitazone effects on glucose and palmitate utilization in isolated rat soleus muscle. Exposure of muscle specimens for 25 h to 5 µmol/liter troglitazone resulted in the distinct inhibition of insulin-stimulated mitochondrial fuel oxidation as indicated by decreased rates of CO2 produced from glucose (glucose converted to CO2, nanomoles per gram per hour: control, 1461 ± 192 versus troglitazone, 753 ± 80, P < .0001) and palmitate (palmitate converted to CO2, nanomoles per gram per hour: control, 75 ± 5 versus troglitazone, 20 ± 2, P < .0001). Blunted fuel oxidation was accompanied by increased rates of anaerobic glycolysis (lactate release, micromoles per gram per hour: control, 17.3 ± 1.0 versus troglitazone, 49.2 ± 2.7, P < .0001) and glucose transport ([3H]2-deoxyglucose transport, cpm per milligram per hour: control, 540 ± 46 versus troglitazone, 791 ± 61, P < .0001), as well as by decreased rates of glycogen synthesis (glucose incorporation into glycogen, micromoles per gram per hour: control, 2.00 ± 0.26 versus troglitazone, 1.02 ± 0.13, P < .001). Such shift toward anaerobic glucose utilization also was seen in the absence of insulin and with short-term troglitazone exposure for 90 min, indicating an underlying mechanism that is rapid and independent of concomitant insulin stimulation. The results demonstrate direct and acute inhibition of fuel oxidation to CO2 by troglitazone in rat skeletal muscle in vitro.

    Introduction
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Chronic oral administration of the thiazolidinedione (TZD) troglitazone (chemical structure in Fujiwara et al., 1988) has been shown to markedly improve insulin sensitivity and glucose homeostasis in type 2 diabetic patients (Nolan et al., 1994; Kaneko, 1997; Schwartz et al., 1998) as well as in various animal models of diabetes and obesity (Fujiwara et al., 1988; Lee et al., 1994; Khoursheed et al., 1995). Troglitazone rapidly became an alternative drug for antidiabetic treatment in Japan and the U.S., but despite successful and extensive clinical use (Watkins and Whitcomb, 1998), the precise mechanisms via which troglitazone exerts its actions on glucose metabolism are not fully understood.

So far, it is known that TZD are potent agonists of the nuclear peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARgamma ), the activation of which modulates gene expression rates, resulting in adipocyte differentiation (Schoonjans et al., 1996; Spiegelman, 1998). Although good evidence is available for an essential role of PPARgamma in TZD-induced improvement of metabolic parameters (Lehmann et al., 1995; Berger et al., 1996; Spiegelman, 1998), it has not yet been established whether all TZD actions are mediated via PPARgamma -dependent modulation of gene transcription. Indeed, evidence accumulates that troglitazone can trigger metabolic responses within a short time range, which rather hints at the existence of transcription-independent TZD effects (Fujiwara et al., 1988; Lee and Olefsky, 1995; Bähr et al., 1996; Fulgencio et al., 1996; Fürnsinn et al., 1997a; Okuno et al., 1997; Park et al., 1998; Raman et al., 1998).

In rats, acute and therefore potentially transcription-independent troglitazone effects include a decrease in circulating glucose concentration (Fujiwara et al., 1988) and an increase in whole body glucose uptake within 30 min as measured by euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp tests (Lee and Olefsky, 1995). Furthermore, studies on short-term troglitazone exposure in vitro revealed inhibition of gluconeogenesis in isolated hepatocytes (Fulgencio et al., 1996; Raman et al., 1998) as well as increased glucose uptake into cultured muscle cells and freshly prepared muscle specimens (Fürnsinn et al., 1997a; Park et al., 1998). Many short-term actions of troglitazone proved to be independent of concomitant insulin stimulation leading some authors to hypothesize an acute insulin-mimetic potential of the drug (Bähr et al., 1996; Park et al., 1998; Raman et al., 1998). At variance to that interpretation, we found in isolated rat soleus muscle that acute troglitazone exposure fails to stimulate intracellular glucose handling in an anabolic manner and, hence, lacks an acute insulin-like or insulin-sensitizing effect (Fürnsinn et al., 1997a). Our previous results suggest that the acute troglitazone-induced increase in glucose transport is associated with noninsulin-like catabolic stimulation of intracellular glucose fluxes as characterized by distinctly increased glycolytic flux and by glycogen depletion (Fürnsinn et al., 1997a).

With regard to lipid metabolism, acute troglitazone inhibition of long-chain fatty acid oxidation has been demonstrated in isolated rat hepatocytes and has been hypothesized to contribute to the antidiabetic efficacy of the drug by shifting fuel selection from lipid to carbohydrate (Fulgencio et al., 1996). Furthermore, troglitazone has been shown to block cholesterol biosynthesis in various cell types in vitro, obviously via a rapid and PPARgamma -independent mechanism (Wang et al., 1999). Most available studies on acute troglitazone action, however, focus on glucose metabolism (Fujiwara et al., 1988; Lee and Olefsky, 1995; Bähr et al., 1996; Fürnsinn et al., 1997a; Okuno et al., 1997; Park et al., 1998; Raman et al., 1998), thus, not accounting for the potential role of lipid metabolism. This study was undertaken to examine in parallel the direct effects of troglitazone on the utilization of palmitate and glucose in skeletal muscle, which is the quantitatively most important target tissue of insulin-stimulated glucose utilization (Baron et al., 1988).

    Materials and Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Rats. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were purchased from the breeding facilities of the University of Vienna (Himberg, Austria). They were kept at an artificial 12-h light/dark cycle at constant room temperature. Conventional laboratory diet and tap water were provided ad libitum until the evening before sacrifice, when only food was withdrawn. Rats weighing approximately 140 g were sacrificed by cervical dislocation between 8:30 and 9:30 AM. All experiments were performed according to local law and to the principles of good laboratory animal care.

Long-Term Muscle Incubation (25-h). Immediately after sacrifice, two longitudinal soleus muscle strips per leg (i.e., four strips per rat) were prepared, weighed (approximately 25 mg/strip), and tied under tension on stainless steel clips as described previously (Crettaz et al., 1980). According to procedures used earlier (Stace et al., 1990; Fürnsinn et al., 1997b), muscles were immediately put into 50-ml Erlenmeyer flasks coated with BlueSlick solution (Serva, Heidelberg, Germany) and placed into a shaking water bath (six strips per flask; 37°C; 130 cycles/min). Each flask contained 20 ml of Cell Culture Medium 199 (5.5 mmol/l glucose; pH 7.35; cat. no. M-4530; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) with additions of 0.3% (w/v) fatty acid-free BSA, 5 mmol/l HEPES, 25,000 U/l penicillin G, and 25 mg/l streptomycin. Palmitate as dissolved in ethanol and troglitazone (provided by Sankyo, Tokyo, Japan) as dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO; Sigma) were added to give final concentrations of 300 µmol/l palmitate, 0.5% (v/v) ethanol, 0.1% (v/v) DMSO, and 0, 0.31, 0.63, 1.25, 2.5, or 5 µmol/l troglitazone. The effects of organic solvents were evaluated in the absence of palmitate in a separate experiment. An atmosphere of 95% O2, 5% CO2 was continuously provided within the flasks.

After a preincubation period of 24 h, muscles were immediately transferred into 25-ml flasks (one strip per flask) and incubated in 3 ml of identical buffer solution, which was in some experiments additionally supplemented with 100 nmol/l insulin. Furthermore, the solution alternatively contained trace amounts of D-[U-14C]glucose, [U-14C]palmitic acid, or 2-deoxy-D-[2,6-3H]glucose plus [U14C]sucrose (all obtained from Amersham, Amersham, UK). After incubation for 60 min, muscles were quickly removed, blotted, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Later, muscle strips were lysed in 1 mol/l KOH at 70°C; the lysate was then used for additional analytical procedures as described below.

Short-Term Muscle Incubation (90-min). Muscles were put into coated 25-ml Erlenmeyer flasks that were placed into the water bath immediately after preparation (one strip per flask). Each flask contained a continuous atmosphere of 95% O2, 5% CO2 and 3 ml of Krebs-Ringer buffer solution (pH 7.35) with additions of 5.5 mmol/l glucose, 0.3% (w/v) BSA, 300 µmol/l palmitate, 0.8% (v/v) ethanol, 0.4% (v/v) DMSO, and 0, 5, 10, 20, 40, 80, 160, or 320 µmol/l troglitazone. The effects of organic solvents were evaluated in the absence of palmitate in a separate experiment.

In the short-term experiments, preincubation lasted for 30 min, after which muscles were immediately transferred into another set of flasks and incubated in 3 ml of identical buffer solution, which was additionally supplemented with the respective radioactive tracers, and in some experiments with 30 nmol/l insulin. After incubation for 60 min, muscles were quickly removed, blotted, frozen, and lysed in KOH for additional analytical procedures.

Analytical Procedures. Net uptake of 2-deoxy-D-[2,6-3H]glucose, a glucose analog that is taken up by the cell where it accumulates as 2-deoxy-D-[2,6-3H]glucose-6 phosphate, was determined using [14C]sucrose as a marker of extracellular space by methods described previously (Fürnsinn et al., 1995). Under the applied experimental conditions, insulin-stimulated [3H]2-deoxyglucose uptake does not reach saturation within the incubation period of 60 min (data not shown). The net rate of glucose incorporation into glycogen is referred to as glycogen synthesis and was determined by measuring the conversion of [14C]glucose to [14C]glycogen as described previously (Crettaz et al., 1980). Rates of CO2 production were calculated from the conversion of [14C]glucose or [14C]palmitate into 14CO2, which was trapped with a solution containing methanol and phenethylamine (1:1) (Fürnsinn et al., 1995). Rates of lactate release were calculated from lactate accumulated in the incubation medium during the experiment. Medium lactate concentration was determined enzymatically, using the lactate dehydrogenase method (Engel and Jones, 1978). For the determination of muscle glycogen content prevailing at the end of the experiment, glycogen in the muscle lysate was completely degraded to glucose with amyloglucosidase (Dimitriadis et al., 1988). Glucose was then measured enzymatically by a commercial kit (Human, Taunusstein, Germany).

Statistics. All results are given as means ± S.E. and P values were calculated by two-tailed paired or unpaired Student's t test as appropriate. A P < .05 was considered significant.

    Results
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Effects of Organic Solvents. Exposure (25-h) to 0.5% ethanol and 0.1% DMSO did not significantly affect insulin-stimulated glucose metabolism as compared with control media without organic solvents (Table 1). In short-term experiments, short-term exposure to 0.8% ethanol and 0.4% DMSO shifted baseline glucose flux somewhat toward catabolic pathways (i.e., from glycogenesis to glycolysis; Table 1). The described effects of troglitazone can nevertheless be attributed to specific action of the drug, because concentrations of solvents were the same in all media including troglitazone-free controls.

                              
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TABLE 1
Effects of organic solvents used

Rates of insulin-stimulated glucose metabolism in soleus muscle strips from healthy Sprague-Dawley rats were incubated in the absence or presence of organic solvent concentrations as used throughout this study. Means ± S.E.; n = 5 or 6 each.

Long-Term Troglitazone Exposure (5 µmol/l). The effects of long-term (25-h) exposure to 5 µmol/l troglitazone in M199 with 5.5 mmol/l glucose on parameters of fuel handling by rat soleus muscle are depicted in Fig. 1. Troglitazone markedly reduced palmitate oxidation to CO2 to 31 ± 3 and 27 ± 3% of control under basal and insulin-stimulated (100 nmol/l) conditions, respectively (Fig. 1A). In parallel, glucose oxidation was significantly inhibited to 52 ± 5 and 51 ± 4%, respectively (Fig. 1B). Hence, the relative decrease in oxidation to CO2 was significantly more pronounced for palmitate than for glucose under both basal and insulin-stimulated conditions (P < .005 each).


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Fig. 1.   Fuel metabolism in soleus muscle strips from healthy Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to 0 (Control) or 5 µmol/l troglitazone for 25 h. Rates of basal and insulin-stimulated (100 nmol/l) CO2 production from palmitate (A) and glucose (B), lactate release (C), [3H]2-deoxyglucose transport (D), and glycogen synthesis (E), as well as glycogen content as determined after the experiment (F) are depicted. Means ± S.E.; n = 10-12 each; a, P < .02; b, P < .001; c, P < .0001 by paired Student's t test.


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Fig. 2.   Fuel metabolism in soleus muscle strips from healthy Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to different concentrations of troglitazone for 25 h. Rates of insulin-stimulated (100 nmol/l) CO2 production from palmitate (A) and glucose (B), lactate release (C), [3H]2-deoxyglucose transport (D), and glycogen synthesis (E) as well as glycogen content as determined after the experiment (F) are depicted as differences versus an intraindividual control incubated without troglitazone (control values listed in Table 2). Means ± S.E.; n = 6-24 each; a, P < .05; b, P < .01; c, P < .005; d, P < .001; e, P < .0001 by paired Student's t test.

Inhibition of fuel oxidation was accompanied by a 3-fold increase in lactate release (to 316 ± 42 and 290 ± 14% of control; Fig. 1C) as well as by augmented glucose transport (to 217 ± 33 and 155 ± 13% of control; Fig. 1D). At the same time, the rate of insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis was reduced (to 63 ± 5 and 54 ± 6% of control; Fig. 1E), resulting in blunted glycogen content at the end of the long-term incubation (to 92 ± 11 and 77 ± 7% of control; Fig. 1F). All the effects of 5 µmol/l troglitazone were therefore similar with and without insulin in the incubation medium.

Long-Term Troglitazone Exposure, Dose-Response-Curve. Figure 2 depicts a dose-response curve for long-term muscle incubation with troglitazone. Because the experiment described above clearly indicated that troglitazone action was independent of concomitant insulin stimulation in vitro, dose dependence was tested under insulin-stimulated conditions only. The data are given as differences versus an intraindividual control value as determined in the absence of troglitazone in the same soleus muscle incubation assay (control values depicted in Table 2).

                              
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TABLE 2
Control values for fuel metabolism in rat soleus muscle

Rates of fuel metabolism in soleus muscle strips from healthy Sprague-Dawley rats incubated in the absence of troglitazone. The data were used for the calculation of intraindividual troglitazone-induced differences as depicted in Figs. 2 and 3. Means ± S.E.; numbers of rats are indicated in parentheses.

Dose-response curves shown in Fig. 2 confirm the results obtained with 5 µmol/l troglitazone (Fig. 1) and, furthermore, indicate that troglitazone concentrations <1 µmol/l suffice to elicit metabolic responses via direct interaction with skeletal muscle in our experimental setup. In spite of a troglitazone-induced decrease in the absolute rates of glucose oxidation, the more pronounced inhibition of palmitate conversion into CO2 indicates a rise in the relative contribution of glucose to CO2 production (percentage of control, glucose versus palmitate: 1.25 µmol/l troglitazone, 81 ± 4 versus 61 ± 7%, P < .02; 2.5 µmol/l troglitazone, 74 ± 4 versus 31 ± 3%, P <.0001; 5 µmol/l troglitazone, 68 ± 6 versus 26 ± 2%, P <.0001).

Short-Term Troglitazone Exposure. The dose-dependent effects of short-term (90-min) troglitazone exposure on various parameters of soleus muscle fuel handling (Fig. 3) are also given as differences versus an intraindividual control value as depicted in Table 2.


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Fig. 3.   Fuel metabolism in soleus muscle strips from healthy Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to different concentrations of troglitazone for 90 min. Rates of basal and insulin-stimulated (30 nmol/l) CO2 production from palmitate (A) and glucose (B), lactate release (C), [3H]2-deoxyglucose transport (D), and glycogen synthesis (E), as well as glycogen content as determined after the experiment (F) are depicted as differences versus an intraindividual control incubated without troglitazone (control values listed in Table 2). Means ± S.E.; n = 5-17 each; a, P < .05; b, P < .01; c, P < .005; d, P < .001; e, P < .0001 by paired Student's t test.

With regard to the lower range of troglitazone concentrations used (5-40 µmol/l), short-term exposure inhibited CO2 production from glucose and palmitate, but the respective decreases were less distinct with short-term than with prolonged drug exposure (compare Figs. 1 and 2 versus Fig. 3). Thus, short-term inhibition of CO2 production from palmitate reached 64 ± 5 and 48 ± 2% of control at 20 µmol/l troglitazone under basal and insulin-stimulated conditions, respectively (Fig. 3A). CO2 production from glucose was not significantly affected, exhibiting only a decreasing trend in the presence of 20 µmol/l troglitazone (to 93 ± 8 and 83 ± 10% of control, respectively; Fig. 3B). In contrast to the inhibitory effect of lower concentrations, ambient troglitazone above 80 µmol/l distinctly stimulated CO2 production from palmitate (at 160 µmol/l under basal and insulin-stimulated conditions: to 250 ± 20 and 240 ± 23% of control, respectively) and glucose (to 167 ± 13 and 129 ± 11% of control, respectively). At the highest troglitazone concentration used (320 µmol/l), the rate of palmitate conversion to CO2 dropped back to the control value in insulin-stimulated muscle specimens only.

The lowest troglitazone concentration used in this dose-response curve (5 µmol/l) sufficed to significantly stimulate muscle lactate release to 130 ± 5 and 121 ± 5% of control under basal and insulin-stimulated conditions, respectively, and lactate production was further stimulated with increasing concentrations of the drug (Fig. 3C). Troglitazone dose-dependent responses were also seen for the rates of 2-deoxyglucose transport (Fig. 3D; troglitazone-induced increase) and glycogen synthesis (Fig. 3E; troglitazone-induced decrease), as well as for glycogen content as determined at the end of the experiment (Fig. 3F; troglitazone-induced decrease). All acute effects of troglitazone were seen both without and with concomitant insulin stimulation.

    Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Our previous study in isolated rat soleus muscle (Fürnsinn et al., 1997a) showed that 90-min troglitazone exposure stimulates glucose metabolism in a noninsulin-like catabolic manner as characterized by marked stimulation of anaerobic glycolysis in association with increased glucose transport but glycogen depletion. This study sheds more light on the direct interaction of troglitazone with skeletal muscle, demonstrating a distinct potential of the drug to directly inhibit CO2 production from glucose as well as from palmitate. Blunted oxidative fuel utilization is reflected by a marked increase in lactate release, indicating that under troglitazone exposure, the energy demands of isolated muscle are to an increased extent covered via anaerobic glycolysis. Such shift toward anaerobic glucose metabolism necessarily enhances the requirement for glycolytic substrate, which is apparently covered by an increment in the rate of glucose uptake and by reduced glucose flux into glycogen stores.

At present, troglitazone is believed to exert its therapeutic action via PPARgamma -dependent modulation of gene transcription, finally resulting in insulin sensitization and improved glucose homeostasis (Lehmann et al., 1995; Berger et al., 1996; Spiegelman, 1998). Insulin sensitization, however, can hardly account for the effects on fuel metabolism described in this study, because troglitazone potently acted in the absence of insulin. Furthermore, the distinct and relatively rapid effect on palmitate oxidation to CO2 (to 64 and 48% within 90 min under basal and insulin-stimulated conditions, respectively) raises the possibility of a transcription-independent mechanism of action. It can, therefore, not be excluded that an as yet unknown biochemical mechanism underlies acute actions of troglitazone in vivo (Fujiwara et al., 1988; Lee and Olefsky, 1995) as well as its direct actions on isolated muscle, with the dramatic reduction of CO2 production hinting at the inhibition of a common step of mitochondrial glucose and palmitate oxidation. In line with that hypothesis, evidence from isolated rat hepatocytes indicates that a troglitazone-induced decrease in long-chain fatty acid oxidation occurs in association with a highly oxidized mitochondrial redox state (Fulgencio et al., 1996). Inhibition of the enzyme long-chain acyl-coenzyme A synthetase by the troglitazone metabolite M1 as found in the hepatocyte model (Fulgencio et al., 1996) can be excluded with regard to isolated skeletal muscle because evidence suggests that troglitazone metabolism to M1 occurs in liver rather than muscle (Kawai et al., 1997). Furthermore, the inhibition of long-chain acyl-coenzyme A synthetase should specifically blunt CO2 production from palmitate but not from glucose. Nevertheless, it should be noted that in our experimental setting, CO2 production from palmitate was more markedly reduced than from glucose, indicating a troglitazone-induced increase in the ratio of glucose/palmitate converted into CO2. Despite a reduction in absolute rates of conversion to CO2 of both glucose and palmitate, our results, therefore, demonstrate a relative shift in fuel utilization from lipid to carbohydrate.

It is of note that both a shift in fuel utilization from lipid to carbohydrate and the induction of a more oxidized mitochondrial state are attributes of other antidiabetic compounds structurally unrelated to troglitazone (Wolf, 1992; Roy et al., 1997; Deems et al., 1998). In spite of such similarities between the actions of troglitazone and other antidiabetic agents, these findings do not allow for final conclusions on the potential contribution of acute troglitazone effects observed in vitro to its antidiabetic efficacy with chronic administration in vivo. The troglitazone concentration required to trigger a significant response in 25-h exposed muscle is below that circulating in plasma from successfully treated diabetic rodents (approximately 0.6 µmol/l; Lee et al., 1994). The increase in troglitazone efficacy with prolonged exposure time (25 h versus 90 min) also underlines the possibility that direct troglitazone effects on muscle fuel oxidation may be of relevance in patients subject to chronic oral treatment. All assumptions on effective troglitazone concentrations in vitro and in vivo are, however, hampered by its unknown biological availability. One of many factors that putatively affect troglitazone availability is its binding to proteins (Sibukawa et al., 1995), and different protein concentrations used in vitro can explain the variations in effective drug concentrations observed in this versus other studies (Fulgencio et al., 1996; Fürnsinn et al., 1997a; Okuno et al., 1997). Additional factors that may affect troglitazone action include facilitation of drug availability by organic solvents in vitro (DMSO, ethanol) or by lipoprotein particles in vivo.

It is of note that results from muscle specimens exposed to troglitazone concentrations above 80 µmol/l for 90 min suggest the operation of another mechanism of troglitazone action that obviously overcomes the inhibitory effect of the drug on fuel oxidation prevailing at lower concentrations. The response to high troglitazone concentrations can be interpreted as distinct catabolic action on muscle fuel metabolism, because increased CO2 production from palmitate is associated with marked stimulation of both aerobic and anaerobic glycolysis as well as with glycogen depletion. Although a role for such catabolic stimulation in the therapeutic action of troglitazone in vivo can not be excluded, an unspecific response due to high ambient drug concentrations in vitro seems rather conceivable. In line with such interpretation, the relative decrease in insulin-stimulated palmitate oxidation to CO2 observed between 160 and 320 µmol/l troglitazone may indicate advanced toxic damage.

Taken together, the study describes acute inhibition by troglitazone of oxidative fuel metabolism in isolated rat soleus muscle, and therefore demonstrates direct troglitazone actions on the quantitatively most important target tissue of insulin. These previously unknown effects of troglitazone are rapid in occurrence and independent of concomitant insulin stimulation. Their contribution to the antidiabetic efficacy of compound in vivo as well as the underlying mechanism of action remain to be elucidated.

    Acknowledgments

We thank Marion Dobramischl for technical assistance and the staff at the Biomedical Research Center, University of Vienna (Vienna, Austria), who took care of the rats.

    Footnotes

Accepted for publication January 31, 2000.

Received for publication October 15, 1999.

1 This work was supported by Sankyo (Tokyo, Japan) and by the Austrian Science Fund (Grant P13049-MED).

Send reprint requests to: Clemens Fürnsinn, Ph.D., Dept. Med. III, Div. Endocrinol. and Metab., Währinger Gürtel 18-20, A-1090, Vienna, Austria. E-mail: clemens.fuernsinn{at}akh-wien.ac.at

    Abbreviations

TZD, thiazolidinedione(s); PPARgamma , nuclear peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma ; DMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide.

    References
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0022-3565/00/2932-0487$03.00/0
THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS
Copyright © 2000 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics



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