AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to confirm the link between glutamate levels in the bloodstream and abdominal obesity using a large group of twins from the TwinsUK resource, finding that those with higher glutamate levels were significantly more likely to have abdominal fat.
  • - Researchers analyzed fat tissue samples to explore how gene expression related to glutamate might influence this association, focusing on the gene GLUL, which is linked to glutamate regulation and is notably active in visceral fat.
  • - Results indicate that higher circulating glutamate levels are connected to a greater risk of abdominal obesity, suggesting that the dysregulation of the GLUL gene in visceral fat may play a key role in this relationship.

Article Abstract

Circulating levels of the amino acid glutamate are associated with central fat accumulation, yet the pathophysiology of this relationship remains unknown. We aimed to (i) refine and validate the association between circulating glutamate and abdominal obesity in a large twin cohort, and (ii) investigate whether transcriptomic profiles in adipose tissue could provide insight into the biological mechanisms underlying the association. First, in a cohort of 4665 individuals from the TwinsUK resource, we identified individuals with abdominal obesity and compared prevalence of the latter across circulating glutamate quintiles. Second, we used transcriptomic signatures generated from adipose tissue, both subcutaneous and visceral, to investigate associations with circulating glutamate levels. Individuals in the top circulating glutamate quintile had a sevenfold higher prevalence of abdominal obesity compared to those in the bottom quintile. The adipose tissue transcriptomic analyses identified GLUL, encoding Glutamate-Ammonia Ligase, as being associated with circulating glutamate and abdominal obesity, with pronounced signatures in the visceral depot. In conclusion, circulating glutamate is positively associated with the prevalence of abdominal obesity which relates to dysregulated GLUL expression specifically in visceral adipose tissue.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00726-022-03181-1DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

circulating glutamate
24
abdominal obesity
24
adipose tissue
16
glutamate
8
glutamate abdominal
8
obesity compared
8
prevalence abdominal
8
circulating
7
abdominal
6
obesity
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!