Expression of Intelectin-1, also known as Omentin-1, is related to clinical phenotypes such as overweight, obesity, insulin resistance, and changes after bariatric surgery

Paul Czechowski(Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research), Tobias Hagemann(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Adhideb Ghosh(ETH Zurich), Wenfei Sun(ETH Zurich), Hua Dong(ETH Zurich), Falko Noé(ETH Zurich), Corinna Niersmann(Deutsches Diabetes-Zentrum e.V.), Isabel Reinisch(ETH Zurich), Christian Wolfrum(ETH Zurich), Christian Herder(Düsseldorf University Hospital), Arne Dietrich(University Hospital Leipzig), Matthias Blüher(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Anne Hoffmann(Helmholtz Zentrum München)
Scientific Reports
September 27, 2024
Cited by 13Open Access
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Abstract

Intelectin-1 (ITLN1; also Omentin-1, OMNT1) is secreted by adipose tissue (AT) and plays an important role in glucose metabolism regulation, with links to obesity-associated diseases. ITLN1 activity so far has rarely been investigated using RNA-sequencing and in larger cohorts. We evaluated ITLN1 expression among three clinical cohorts of the Leipzig Obesity BioBank-a cross-sectional cohort comprising of 1480 people, a cohort of people with metabolically healthy or unhealthy obesity (31 insulin-sensitive, 42 insulin-resistant individuals with obesity), and a longitudinal two-step bariatric surgery cohort (n = 65). We hypothesized that AT ITLN1 expression is associated with serum omentin-1, clinical parameters associated with obesity, and with weight loss after bariatric surgery. We also investigated the correlation of AT ITLN1 expression with genes related to inflammatory response, lipid metabolism, obesity, and regulation of energy balance. Likewise, we inspected gene group expression and metabolic pathways associated with ITLN1 expression using gene set enrichment and gene correlation analysis. We show that ITLN1 expression differs in VAT and SAT, and should therefore be analyzed separately. Furthermore, ITLN1 expression increases with VAT tissue mass, but is negatively affected by AT tissue dysfunction among individuals with unhealthy obesity, corroborated by interplay with genes related to tissue inflammation. Gene set enrichment and gene correlation analysis of ITLN1 expression suggest that AT ITLN1 expression is related to local inflammatory processes in AT, but also in processes such as regulation of appetite, energy balance, and maintenance of body weight.


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