N. Barzilai et L. Rossetti, RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHANGES IN BODY-COMPOSITION AND INSULIN RESPONSIVENESS IN MODELS OF THE AGING RAT, American journal of physiology: endocrinology and metabolism, 32(3), 1995, pp. 591-597
Increased body weight (BW) is one of several confounding factors that
may contribute to the development of insulin resistance in human aging
. Therefore aging-associated increase in BW was determined by (H2O)-H-
3 in Sprague-Dawley (S-D, n = 40) rats and was highly correlated with
increased lean body mass (LBM), fat mass (FM), and plasma insulin and
free fatty acid (FFA) levels (r(2) > 0.850, P < 0.01 for all). Insulin
(18 mU . kg(-1) . min(-1)) responsiveness (R(d); 270 +/- 10 mu mol .
kg LBM(-1) . min(-1), P < 0.01) decreased by 17% between 2 and 4 mo bu
t did not decline further at 14 mo. This decrease was inversely correl
ated with the increase in FM between 2 and 4 mo (r(2) = 0.522, P < 0.0
5). The decline in R(d) was accompanied by an similar to 20% decrease
in glycolytic rate by 4 mo (P < 0.01) and in glycogen synthesis rate a
t 14 mo (P < 0.01) compared with 2-mo rats. Thus early impairment in i
ntracellular glucose metabolism occurred concomitantly with an initial
, rapid, and disproportionate increase in FM compared with LBM. Furthe
r increases in FM after 4 mo of age were not associated with a further
decrease in insulin responsiveness in either S-D or Fischer 344 aging
rats.