Human and mouse muscle transcriptomic analyses identify insulin receptor mRNA downregulation in hyperinsulinemia‐associated insulin resistance

0301 basic medicine Down-Regulation Antigens, CD/biosynthesis Cell Line Mice 03 medical and health sciences Antigens, CD insulin resistance Hyperinsulinism Animals Humans RNA, Messenger RNA-Seq insulin receptor Muscle, Skeletal insulin signaling Research Articles SIN3A Mice, Knockout 2. Zero hunger Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism Hyperinsulinism/genetics Receptor, Insulin/biosynthesis RNA, Messenger/biosynthesis Receptor, Insulin hyperinsulinemia Insulin Resistance
DOI: 10.1096/fj.202100497rr Publication Date: 2021-12-18T14:01:02Z
ABSTRACT
Hyperinsulinemia is commonly viewed as a compensatory response to insulin resistance, yet studies have demonstrated that chronically elevated insulin may also drive insulin resistance. The molecular mechanisms underpinning this potentially cyclic process remain poorly defined, especially on a transcriptome-wide level. Transcriptomic meta-analysis in >450 human samples demonstrated that fasting insulin reliably and negatively correlated with INSR mRNA in skeletal muscle. To establish causality and study the direct effects of prolonged exposure to excess insulin in muscle cells, we incubated C2C12 myotubes with elevated insulin for 16 h, followed by 6 h of serum starvation, and established that acute AKT and ERK signaling were attenuated in this model of in vitro hyperinsulinemia. Global RNA-sequencing of cells both before and after nutrient withdrawal highlighted genes in the insulin receptor (INSR) signaling, FOXO signaling, and glucose metabolism pathways indicative of 'hyperinsulinemia' and 'starvation' programs. Consistently, we observed that hyperinsulinemia led to a substantial reduction in Insr gene expression, and subsequently a reduced surface INSR and total INSR protein, both in vitro and in vivo. Bioinformatic modeling combined with RNAi identified SIN3A as a negative regulator of Insr mRNA (and JUND, MAX, and MXI as positive regulators of Irs2 mRNA). Together, our analysis identifies mechanisms which may explain the cyclic processes underlying hyperinsulinemia-induced insulin resistance in muscle, a process directly relevant to the etiology and disease progression of type 2 diabetes.
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