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Inward Glucose Transfer Accounts for Insulin-Dependent Increase in Brain Glucose Metabolism Associated with Diet-Induced Obesity.

Senda BahriMichael HorowitzCharles-Henri Malbert
Published in: Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.) (2018)
Whole-body insulin sensitivity was reduced by more than 50% in the obesity group. During insulin stimulation, whole-brain insulin-induced increased glucose uptake was unaltered in lean animals but increased markedly in the animals with obesity. The increased glucose uptake reflected an increase in the inward transfer without changes in phosphorylation or outward brain transport. Connectivity was increased in the animals with obesity CONCLUSIONS: Diet-induced obesity is associated with an increase in insulin-stimulated brain glucose uptake as a consequence of a larger inward transfer. These changes occurred together with an increased connectivity in reference to regions associated with memory recollection.
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