Gut microbiota impairs insulin clearance during obesity

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Abstract

Hyperinsulinemia can be a cause and consequence of obesity and insulin resistance. Increased insulin secretion and reduced insulin clearance can contribute to hyperinsulinemia. The triggers for changes in insulin clearance during obesity are ill-defined. We found that oral antibiotics mitigated impaired insulin clearance in mice fed a high fat diet (HFD) for 12 weeks or longer. Short-term HFD feeding and aging did not alter insulin clearance in mice. Germ-free mice colonized with microbes from HFD-fed mice had impaired insulin clearance, but not C-peptide clearance, and only after mice were colonized for 6 weeks and then HFD-fed. Five bacterial taxa predicted >90% of the variance in insulin clearance. Our data indicate that gut microbes are an independent and transmissible factor that regulates obesity-induced changes in insulin clearance. A small cluster of microbes may be a target for mitigating defects in insulin clearance and the progression of obesity and Type 2 Diabetes. We propose that a small community in the gut microbiota can impair insulin clearance and increase insulin load and the risk of complications from hyperinsulinemia.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00