TY - JOUR T1 - In male rats, the ability of central insulin to suppress glucose production is impaired by olanzapine, whereas glucose uptake is left intact JF - Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience JO - J Psychiatry Neurosci SP - 424 LP - 431 DO - 10.1503/jpn.170092 VL - 42 IS - 6 AU - Chantel Kowalchuk AU - Celine Teo AU - Virginia Wilson AU - Araba Chintoh AU - Loretta Lam AU - Sri Mahavir Agarwal AU - Adria Giacca AU - Gary J. Remington AU - Margaret K. Hahn Y1 - 2017/11/01 UR - http://jpn.ca/content/42/6/424.abstract N2 - Background: Insulin receptors are widely expressed in the brain and may represent a crossroad between metabolic and cognitive disorders. Although antipsychotics, such as olanzapine, are the cornerstone treatment for schizophrenia, they are associated with high rates of type 2 diabetes and lack efficacy for illness-related cognitive deficits. Historically, this risk of diabetes was attributed to the weight gain propensity of antipsychotics, but recent work suggests antipsychotics can have weight-independent diabetogenic effects involving unknown brain-mediated mechanisms. Here, we examined whether antipsychotics disrupt central insulin action, hypothesizing that olanzapine would impair the well-established ability of central insulin to supress hepatic glucose production.Methods: Pancreatic euglycemic clamps were used to measure glucose kinetics alongside a central infusion of insulin or vehicle into the third ventricle. Male rats were pretreated with olanzapine or vehicle per our established model of acute olanzapine-induced peripheral insulin resistance. Groups included (central–peripheral) vehicle–vehicle (n = 11), insulin–vehicle (n = 10), insulin–olanzapine (n = 10) and vehicle–olanzapine (n = 8).Results: There were no differences in peripheral glucose or insulin levels. Unexpectedly, we showed that central insulin increased glucose uptake, and this effect was not perturbed by olanzapine. We replicated suppression of glucose production by insulin (clamp relative to basal: 77.9% ± 13.1%, all p < 0.05), an effect abolished by olanzapine (insulin–olanzapine: 7.7% ± 14%).Limitations: This study used only male rats and an acute dose of olanzapine.Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first study suggesting olanzapine may impair central insulin sensing, elucidating a potential mechanism of antipsychotic-induced diabetes and opening avenues of investigation related to domains of schizophrenia psychopathology. ER -