Chronic inflammation in fat plays a crucial role in the development of obesity-related insulin resistance

Haiyan Xu(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Glenn T. Barnes(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Qing Yang(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Guo Tan(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Daseng Yang(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Chieh Jason Chou(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Jason Sole(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Andrew J. Nichols(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Jeffrey S. Ross(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Louis A. Tartaglia(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States)), Hong Chen(Novartis (China))
Journal of Clinical Investigation
December 15, 2003
Cited by 5,832Open Access
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Abstract

Insulin resistance arises from the inability of insulin to act normally in regulating nutrient metabolism in peripheral tissues. Increasing evidence from human population studies and animal research has established correlative as well as causative links between chronic inflammation and insulin resistance. However, the underlying molecular pathways are largely unknown. In this report, we show that many inflammation and macrophage-specific genes are dramatically upregulated in white adipose tissue (WAT) in mouse models of genetic and high-fat diet-induced obesity (DIO). The upregulation is progressively increased in WAT of mice with DIO and precedes a dramatic increase in circulating-insulin level. Upon treatment with rosiglitazone, an insulin-sensitizing drug, these macrophage-originated genes are downregulated. Histologically, there is evidence of significant infiltration of macrophages, but not neutrophils and lymphocytes, into WAT of obese mice, with signs of adipocyte lipolysis and formation of multinucleate giant cells. These data suggest that macrophages in WAT play an active role in morbid obesity and that macrophage-related inflammatory activities may contribute to the pathogenesis of obesity-induced insulin resistance. We propose that obesity-related insulin resistance is, at least in part, a chronic inflammatory disease initiated in adipose tissue.


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