Persistent Organic Pollutant Exposure Leads to Insulin Resistance Syndrome

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Ruzzin, Jérôme | Petersen, Rasmus, K. | Fouilloux-Meugnier, Emmanuelle | Madsen, Lise | Lock, Erik-Jan | Lillefosse, Haldis | Ma, Tao | Pesenti, Sandra | Sonne, Si Brask | Ma, Troels Torben | Malde, Marian Kjellevold | Du, Zhen-Yu | Chavey, Carine | Fajas, Lluis | Lundebye, Anne-Katrine | Lehn Brand, Christian | Vidal, Hubert | Kristiansen, Karsten | Frøyland, Livar

Edité par CCSD ; National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences -

International audience. Background: the incidence of the insulin resistance syndrome has increased at an alarming rate worldwide, creating a serious challenge to public health care in the 21st century. Recently, epide-miological studies have associated the prevalence of type 2 diabetes with elevated body burdens of persistent organic pollutants (POPs). However, experimental evidence demonstrating a causal link between POPs and the development of insulin resistance is lacking. Objective: We investigated whether exposure to POPs contributes to insulin resistance and meta-bolic disorders. Methods: Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed for 28 days to lipophilic POPs through the con-sumption of a high-fat diet containing either refined or crude fish oil obtained from farmed Atlantic salmon. In addition, differentiated adipocytes were exposed to several POP mixtures that mimicked the relative abundance of organic pollutants present in crude salmon oil. We measured body weight, whole-body insulin sensitivity, POP accumulation, lipid and glucose homeostasis, and gene expres-sion and we performed micro array analysis. Results: Adult male rats exposed to crude, but not refined, salmon oil developed insulin resis-tance, abdominal obesity, and hepatosteatosis. The contribution of POPs to insulin resistance was confirmed in cultured adipocytes where POPs, especially organochlorine pesticides, led to robust inhibition of insulin action. Moreover, POPs induced down-regulation of insulin-induced gene-1 (Insig-1) and Lpin1, two master regulators of lipid homeostasis. Conclusion: Our findings provide evidence that exposure to POPs commonly present in food chains leads to insulin resistance and associated metabolic disorders

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