Adipose tissue pathways involved in weight loss of cancer cachexia

Ingrid Dahlman(Karolinska University Hospital), Niklas Mejhert(Karolinska University Hospital), Kristina Linder(Karolinska University Hospital), Thorhallur Agustsson(Karolinska University Hospital), David M. Mutch(University of Guelph), Agné Kulyté(Karolinska University Hospital), B. Isaksson(Karolinska University Hospital), Johan Permert(Karolinska University Hospital), Nataša Petrovič(Stockholm University), Jan Nedergaard(Stockholm University), Eva Sjölin(Karolinska University Hospital), David Brodin(Karolinska Institutet), Karine Clément(Inserm), Karin Dahlman‐Wright(Karolinska Institutet), Mikael Rydén(Karolinska University Hospital), Peter Arner(Karolinska University Hospital)
British Journal of Cancer
April 20, 2010
Cited by 146Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The regulatory gene pathways that accompany loss of adipose tissue in cancer cachexia are unknown and were explored using pangenomic transcriptome profiling. METHODS: Global gene expression profiles of abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue were studied in gastrointestinal cancer patients with (n=13) or without (n=14) cachexia. RESULTS: Cachexia was accompanied by preferential loss of adipose tissue and decreased fat cell volume, but not number. Adipose tissue pathways regulating energy turnover were upregulated, whereas genes in pathways related to cell and tissue structure (cellular adhesion, extracellular matrix and actin cytoskeleton) were downregulated in cachectic patients. Transcriptional response elements for hepatic nuclear factor-4 (HNF4) were overrepresented in the promoters of extracellular matrix and adhesion molecule genes, and adipose HNF4 mRNA was downregulated in cachexia. CONCLUSIONS: Cancer cachexia is characterised by preferential loss of adipose tissue; muscle mass is less affected. Loss of adipose tissue is secondary to a decrease in adipocyte lipid content and associates with changes in the expression of genes that regulate energy turnover, cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix, which suggest high tissue remodelling. Changes in gene expression in cachexia are reciprocal to those observed in obesity, suggesting that regulation of fat mass at least partly corresponds to two sides of the same coin.


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