Normal Triglyceride Levels Despite Insulin Resistance in African Americans: Role of Lipoprotein Lipase
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Abstract Lipoprotein lipase (LPL), the enzyme responsible for hydrolyzing triglyceride (TG) in plasma lipoproteins, is a key regulator of plasma TG levels. In Caucasians, postheparin-LPL (PH-LPL) activity is impaired in the presence of insulin resistance and leads to elevated TG levels. However, African Americans are often both insulin-resistant and normotriglyceridemic. But in African Americans, the effect of insulin resistance on PH-LPL activity has not been studied. In African Americans, if insulin resistance is not associated with a decrease in PH-LPL activity, this could account for the simultaneous presence of insulin resistance and normotriglyceridemia. Therefore, our goal was to determine in African Americans the relationship between insulin resistance and PH-LPL activity. In a cross-sectional study of 107 nondiabetic African Americans (57 men and 50 women; age mean +/- SD, 35 +/- 8 years, range 22-50 years; body mass index 31.6 +/- 7.9 kg/m 2 , range 18.5-54.7 kg/m 2 ), fasting TG levels and PH-LPL activity were determined. Visceral adipose tissue was measured by abdominal computed tomographic scan. Insulin resistance was determined by the insulin sensitivity index ( S I ). Subjects were divided into tertiles by S I . The range of S I in each tertile was 12.75 to 3.99, 3.87 to 2.20, 2.06 to 0.17 mU . L -1 . min -1 . Insulin resistance was defined as being in the third tertile. TG levels in the men and women were 82.2 +/- 35.5 versus 56.4 +/- 30.1 mg/dL, P < .001. There were no sex difference in PH-LPL activity (8.9 +/- 2.5 vs 9.6 +/- 3.2 mmol/h per liter, P = .30) or S I (3.65 +/- 2.59 vs 3.23 +/- 1.89 L . mU -1 . min -1 , P = .49). Although 47% of the subjects were obese, only 4% of subjects had hypertriglyceridemia (TG > or =150 mg/dL). By 2 separate analyses, PH-LPL was a major determinant of TG levels. First, there was a significant inverse correlation between PH-LPL activity and TG levels (men: r = -0.46, P < .001; women: r = -0.28, P = .046). Second, in the multiple regression analysis with TG as the dependent variable and PH-LPL, age, sex, S I , and visceral adipose tissue as independent variables, adjusted R 2 was 54% and the effect of PH-LPL on TG levels was highly significant( P < .001). However, insulin resistance did not appear to influence PH-LPL activity. This is demonstrated in 3 ways: first, PH-LPL activity was not different in the S I tertiles (9.10 +/- 2.75, 9.52 +/- 2.91, 9.13 +/- 2.89 mmol/h per liter, P = .78); the correlation between PH-LPL and S I was not significant (men: r = 0.09, P = .51; women: r = -0.03, P = .78), and a multiple regression with PH-LPL as the dependent variable and age, S I , body mass index, and sex as independent variables, adjusted R 2 was <2% and the contribution of S I was not significant ( P = .53). Hence, in African Americans, increased PH-LPL activity is associated with a decrease in TG levels. The lack of an effect of insulin resistance on PH-LPL could allow LPL to clear TG even in the presence of insulin resistance and explain the coexistence of insulin resistance and normotriglyceridemia in African Americans.
The Triglyceride/HDL Ratio as a Surrogate Biomarker for Insulin Resistance.
Baneu P, Vacarescu C, Dragan S, Cirin L, Lazar-Hocher A, Cozgarea A Biomedicines. 2024; 12(7).
PMID: 39062066 PMC: 11274455. DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines12071493.
Nair L, Asuzu P, Dagogo-Jack S J Endocr Soc. 2024; 8(7):bvae116.
PMID: 38911352 PMC: 11192623. DOI: 10.1210/jendso/bvae116.
Stevens C, Jain S Int J Mol Sci. 2024; 25(2).
PMID: 38279305 PMC: 10816015. DOI: 10.3390/ijms25021305.
Wani K, Khattak M, Saadawy G, Al-Attas O, Alokail M, Al-Daghri N Diagnostics (Basel). 2023; 13(2).
PMID: 36673133 PMC: 9858553. DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13020324.
Cisse K, Samadoulougou D, Bognini J, Kangoye T, Kirakoya-Samadoulougou F PLoS One. 2021; 16(8):e0255575.
PMID: 34351987 PMC: 8341491. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0255575.