The Metabolic Classroom with Dr. Ben Bikman

Energy Toxicity and Insulin Resistance

Jun 6, 2024
Discover the intriguing concept of energy toxicity and its connection to insulin resistance in muscle and liver cells. Explore how excessive fat storage, especially triglycerides, can lead to metabolic issues. Uncover the roles of lipotoxicity, diacylglycerols, and ceramides in disrupting insulin signaling and mitochondrial function. Dive into the athlete's paradox, revealing that muscle triglycerides alone aren't the culprit. Learn how high insulin levels and inflammation contribute to ceramide accumulation, affecting metabolic health.
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INSIGHT

Energy Toxicity and Lipotoxicity Defined

  • Energy toxicity explains why muscle and liver cells become insulin resistant when overloaded with energy as fat.
  • The term lipotoxicity better describes this condition focusing on harmful fat accumulation causing insulin resistance.
INSIGHT

Athlete's Paradox Challenges Fat Role

  • Muscle triglycerides alone do not cause insulin resistance, illustrated by the athlete's paradox.
  • Lean athletes have high muscle fat but remain insulin sensitive, disproving triglycerides as the insulin resistance cause.
INSIGHT

Diacylglycerols Disrupt Insulin Signaling

  • Diacylglycerols (DAGs) disrupt insulin signaling by activating protein kinase C.
  • DAG accumulation inhibits the insulin cascade causing insulin resistance at the cellular level.
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