Augmented capacity for peripheral serotonin release in human obesity

RL Young, AL Lumsden, AM Martin… - International Journal of …, 2018 - nature.com
RL Young, AL Lumsden, AM Martin, G Schober, N Pezos, SS Thazhath, NJ Isaacs…
International Journal of Obesity, 2018nature.com
Background/objectives Evidence from animal studies highlights an important role for
serotonin (5-HT), derived from gut enterochromaffin (EC) cells, in regulating hepatic glucose
production, lipolysis and thermogenesis, and promoting obesity and dysglycemia. Evidence
in humans is limited, although elevated plasma 5-HT concentrations are linked to obesity.
Subjects/methods We assessed (i) plasma 5-HT concentrations before and during
intraduodenal glucose infusion (4 kcal/min for 30 min) in non-diabetic obese (BMI 44±4 …
Background/objectives
Evidence from animal studies highlights an important role for serotonin (5-HT), derived from gut enterochromaffin (EC) cells, in regulating hepatic glucose production, lipolysis and thermogenesis, and promoting obesity and dysglycemia. Evidence in humans is limited, although elevated plasma 5-HT concentrations are linked to obesity.
Subjects/methods
We assessed (i) plasma 5-HT concentrations before and during intraduodenal glucose infusion (4 kcal/min for 30 min) in non-diabetic obese (BMI 44 ± 4 kg/m2, N = 14) and control (BMI 24 ± 1 kg/m2, N = 10) subjects, (ii) functional activation of duodenal EC cells (immunodetection of phospho-extracellular related-kinase, pERK) in response to glucose, and in separate subjects, (iii) expression of tryptophan hydroxylase-1 (TPH1) in duodenum and colon (N = 39), and (iv) 5-HT content in primary EC cells from these regions (N = 85).
Results
Plasma 5-HT was twofold higher in obese than control responders prior to (P = 0.025), and during (iAUC, P = 0.009), intraduodenal glucose infusion, and related positively to BMI (R2 = 0.334, P = 0.003) and HbA1c (R2 = 0.508, P = 0.009). The density of EC cells in the duodenum was twofold higher at baseline in obese subjects than controls (P = 0.023), with twofold more EC cells activated by glucose infusion in the obese (EC cells co-expressing 5-HT and pERK, P = 0.001), while the 5-HT content of EC cells in duodenum and colon was similar; TPH1 expression was 1.4-fold higher in the duodenum of obese subjects (P = 0.044), and related positively to BMI (R2 = 0.310, P = 0.031).
Conclusions
Human obesity is characterized by an increased capacity to produce and release 5-HT from the proximal small intestine, which is strongly linked to higher body mass, and glycemic control. Gut-derived 5-HT is likely to be an important driver of pathogenesis in human obesity and dysglycemia.
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