Litcius/Paper detail

5-Aminovaleric acid betaine predicts impaired glucose metabolism and diabetes

Linus Haberbosch, Sylwia Kierszniowska, Lothar Willmitzer, Knut Mai, Joachim Spranger, Lukas Maurer

2023Nutrition and Diabetes11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: 5-Aminovaleric acid betaine (5-AVAB) has recently been identified as a diet and microbial-dependent factor inducing obesity and hepatic steatosis in mice fed a Western diet. Accumulating evidence suggests a role in metabolic dysfunction associated with obesity, diabetes, and fatty liver disease. However, whether 5-AVAB plays a role in human disease is unclear, and human data are sparse. METHODS: We measured circulating 5-AVAB serum levels in 143 individuals with overweight or obesity participating in a randomized intervention study (NCT00850629) investigating the long-term effect of a weight maintenance strategy after diet-induced weight reduction. RESULTS: Higher 5-AVAB serum levels correlate with worse estimates of obesity, glucose metabolism, and hepatic steatosis after weight loss. Furthermore, higher 5-AVAB levels after weight loss independently predict detrimental changes in glucose metabolism 18 months after the successful weight reduction. CONCLUSION: Our human data supports previous findings in rodents indicating a relevant, potentially disadvantageous function of 5-AVAB in the context of metabolic dysbalance.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineWeight lossInternal medicineSteatosisEndocrinologyOverweightNonalcoholic fatty liver diseaseObesityDiabetes mellitusBetaineCarbohydrate metabolismContext (archaeology)Metabolic syndromeType 2 diabetesMetabolismDiseaseFatty liverBiologyBiochemistryPaleontologyDiet and metabolism studiesFolate and B Vitamins ResearchMetabolism and Genetic Disorders