Obesity-associated improvements in metabolic profile through expansion of adipose tissue

Jayoung Kim(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Esther van de Wall(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Mathieu Laplante(Centre hospitalier de l'Université Laval), Anthony V. Azzara(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), María Elena Trujillo Ortega, Susanna M. Hofmann(University of Cincinnati), Todd Schraw, Jorge L. Durand, Hua Li, Guangyu Li(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Linda A. Jelicks, Mark F. Mehler(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), David Y. Hui(University of Cincinnati), Yves Deshaies(Centre hospitalier de l'Université Laval), Gerald I. Shulman(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Gary J. Schwartz(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Philipp E. Scherer(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
August 25, 2007
Cited by 1,298Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Excess caloric intake can lead to insulin resistance. The underlying reasons are complex but likely related to ectopic lipid deposition in nonadipose tissue. We hypothesized that the inability to appropriately expand subcutaneous adipose tissue may be an underlying reason for insulin resistance and beta cell failure. Mice lacking leptin while overexpressing adiponectin showed normalized glucose and insulin levels and dramatically improved glucose as well as positively affected serum triglyceride levels. Therefore, modestly increasing the levels of circulating full-length adiponectin completely rescued the diabetic phenotype in ob/ob mice. They displayed increased expression of PPARgamma target genes and a reduction in macrophage infiltration in adipose tissue and systemic inflammation. As a result, the transgenic mice were morbidly obese, with significantly higher levels of adipose tissue than their ob/ob littermates, leading to an interesting dichotomy of increased fat mass associated with improvement in insulin sensitivity. Based on these data, we propose that adiponectin acts as a peripheral "starvation" signal promoting the storage of triglycerides preferentially in adipose tissue. As a consequence, reduced triglyceride levels in the liver and muscle convey improved systemic insulin sensitivity. These mice therefore represent what we believe is a novel model of morbid obesity associated with an improved metabolic profile.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis