Obesity is associated with increased brain glucose uptake and activity but not neuroinflammation (TSPO availability) in monozygotic twin pairs discordant for BMI—Exercise training reverses increased brain activity




Hentilä, Jaakko; Tuisku, Jouni; Ojala, Ronja; Sun, Lihua; Lietzén, Martin S.; Virtanen, Heidi; Lautamäki, Riikka; Koskensalo, Kalle; Nummenmaa, Lauri; Löyttyniemi, Eliisa; Helin, Semi; Pietiläinen, Kirsi H.; Kaprio, Jaakko; Lahti, Leo; Malm, Tarja; Rinne, Juha O.; Hannukainen, Jarna C.

PublisherJohn Wiley & Sons

2025

Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism

1462-8902

1463-1326

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/dom.70109

https://doi.org/10.1111/dom.70109

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/500392232



Aims

Obesity is associated with increased insulin-stimulated brain glucose uptake (BGU) which is opposite to decreased GU observed in peripheral tissues. Increased BGU was shown to be reversed by weight loss and exercise training, but the mechanisms remain unknown. We investigated whether neuroinflammation (TSPO availability) and brain activity drive the obesity-associated increase in BGU and whether this increase is reversed by exercise training.

Materials and Methods

Twelve monozygotic twin pairs mean age 40.4 (SD) years discordant for BMI (leaner mean 29.1 (SD) 6.3, heavier 36.7 (SD) 7.0 kg·m−2) performed 6-month long exercise intervention. Insulin-stimulated BGU during euglycaemic-hyperinsulinaemic clamp, brain inflammation (translocator protein (TSPO) availability) and brain resting state activity were studied by [18F]FDG-PET, [11C]PK11195-PET, and fMRI, respectively. Cognitive function was assessed by an online survey.

Results

Exercise training had no effect on insulin-stimulated BGU, brain neuroinflammation (TSPO availability), or BMI. Exercise improved VO2peak, whole-body insulin sensitivity, and cognitive function similarly in both groups (all, p <0.05) as well as decreased resting state brain activity in heavier co-twins (p <0.05). At baseline, heavier co-twins had worse whole-body insulin sensitivity (p <0.01), increased BGU in the parietal cortex and caudatus, as well as increased resting state brain activity (both, p <0.05) and no difference in cognitive function. Leaner co-twins had higher TSPO availability in white matter and the hippocampus (p <0.05).

Conclusions

Exercise training had no effect on insulin-stimulated BGU or neuroinflammation (TSPO availability) but it reversed increased resting state brain activity in heavier co-twins. At baseline, obesity was associated with increased insulin-stimulated BGU and resting state brain activity, independent of genetics.


This study is financially supported by: Academy of Finland (JCH decision 317 332), Hospital District of Southwest Finland, the Finnish cultural foundation (JCH, JH and MSL), Kyllikki and Uolevi Lehikoinen foundation (JH), the Diabetes research foundation of Finland (JCH, JH, RO and MSL), Varsinais-Suomi Regional Fund (JCH, RO and JH), Maud Kuistila memorial foundation (JH), Maija and Matti Vaskio Foundation (MSL), Emil Aaltonen Foundation (MSL), the Turku Finnish University Society (RO), Turku University Foundation (RO) and University of Turku Doctoral Programmes in Clinical Research (RO). JK has been supported by the Academy of Finland Center of Excellence in Complex Disease Genetics (grant # 352792 to Jaakko Kaprio).


Last updated on 2025-02-10 at 08:53