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Roles of Diacylglycerols and Ceramides in Hepatic Insulin Resistance.

Citation
Petersen, M. C., and G. I. Shulman. “Roles Of Diacylglycerols And Ceramides In Hepatic Insulin Resistance.”. Trends In Pharmacological Sciences, pp. 649-665.
Center Yale University
Author Max C Petersen, Gerald I Shulman
Keywords ceramide, Ectopic lipid, insulin receptor kinase, Insulin resistance, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, protein kinase C epsilon
Abstract

Although ample evidence links hepatic lipid accumulation with hepatic insulin resistance, the mechanistic basis of this association is incompletely understood and controversial. Diacylglycerols (DAGs) and ceramides have emerged as the two best-studied putative mediators of lipid-induced hepatic insulin resistance. Both lipids were first associated with insulin resistance in skeletal muscle and were subsequently hypothesized to mediate insulin resistance in the liver. However, the putative roles for DAGs and ceramides in hepatic insulin resistance have proved more complex than originally imagined, with various genetic and pharmacologic manipulations yielding a vast and occasionally contradictory trove of data to sort. In this review we examine the state of this field, turning a critical eye toward both DAGs and ceramides as putative mediators of lipid-induced hepatic insulin resistance.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Trends in pharmacological sciences
Volume
38
Issue
7
Number of Pages
649-665
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1873-3735
DOI
10.1016/j.tips.2017.04.004
Alternate Journal
Trends Pharmacol. Sci.
PMID
28551355
PMCID
PMC5499157
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