Uncoupling of Obesity from Insulin Resistance Through a Targeted Mutation in <i>aP2</i> , the Adipocyte Fatty Acid Binding Protein

Gökhan S. Hotamışlıgil(Harvard University), Randall S. Johnson(University of California San Diego), R Distel(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Ramsey Ellis(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Virginia E. Papaioannou(Columbia University), Bruce M. Spiegelman(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Science
November 22, 1996
Cited by 924

Abstract

Fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) are small cytoplasmic proteins that are expressed in a highly tissue-specific manner and bind to fatty acids such as oleic and retinoic acid. Mice with a null mutation in aP2, the gene encoding the adipocyte FABP, were developmentally and metabolically normal. The aP2-deficient mice developed dietary obesity but, unlike control mice, they did not develop insulin resistance or diabetes. Also unlike their obese wild-type counterparts, obese aP2-/- animals failed to express in adipose tissue tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), a molecule implicated in obesity-related insulin resistance. These results indicate that aP2 is central to the pathway that links obesity to insulin resistance, possibly by linking fatty acid metabolism to expression of TNF-alpha.


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