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1.
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol ; 43(5): 684-696, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36924232

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Adaptation of fat depots to change in fuel availability is critical for metabolic flexibility and cardiometabolic health. The mechanisms responsible for fat depot-specific lipid sensing and shuttling remain elusive. Adipose tissue microvascular endothelial cells (AT-EC) regulates bidirectional fatty acid fluxes depending on fed or fasted state. How AT-EC sense and adapt to metabolic changes according to AT location remains to be established. METHODS: We combined transcriptional analysis of native human AT-EC together with in vitro approaches in primary human AT-EC and in vivo and ex vivo studies of mice under fed and fasted conditions. RESULTS: Transcriptional large-scale analysis of human AT-EC isolated from gluteofemoral and abdominal subcutaneous AT revealed that the endothelium exhibits a fat depot-specific signature associated with lipid handling and Notch signaling enrichment. We uncovered a functional link between metabolic status and endothelial DLL4 (delta-like canonical notch ligand 4), which decreases with fasting. DLL4 regulates fatty acid uptake through nontranscriptional modulation of macropinocytosis-dependent long chain fatty acid uptake. Importantly, the changes in DLL4 expression, in response to energy transition state, is impaired under obesogenic conditions, an early alteration coinciding with a defect in systemic fatty acid fluxes adaptation and a resistance to weight loss. CONCLUSIONS: DLL4 is a major actor in the adaptive mechanisms of AT-EC to regulate lipid fluxes. It likely contributes to fat depot-dependent metabolism in response to energy transition states. AT-EC alteration with obesity may favor metabolic inflexibility and the development of cardiometabolic disorders.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases , Endothelial Cells , Mice , Humans , Animals , Endothelial Cells/metabolism , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Obesity/genetics , Obesity/metabolism , Fasting , Endothelium/metabolism , Cardiovascular Diseases/metabolism , Calcium-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/metabolism
2.
Aging Cell ; 22(3): e13776, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36617688

ABSTRACT

Senescence is a key event in the impairment of adipose tissue (AT) function with obesity and aging but the underlying molecular and cellular players remain to be fully defined, particularly with respect to the human AT progenitors. We have found distinct profiles of senescent progenitors based on AT location between stroma from visceral versus subcutaneous AT. In addition to flow cytometry, we characterized the location differences with transcriptomic and proteomic approaches, uncovering the genes and developmental pathways that are underlying replicative senescence. We identified key components to include INBHA as well as SFRP4 and GREM1, antagonists for the WNT and BMP pathways, in the senescence-associated secretory phenotype and NOTCH3 in the senescence-associated intrinsic phenotype. Notch activation in AT progenitors inhibits adipogenesis and promotes myofibrogenesis independently of TGFß. In addition, we demonstrate that NOTCH3 is enriched in the premyofibroblast progenitor subset, which preferentially accumulates in the visceral AT of patients with an early obesity trajectory. Herein, we reveal that NOTCH3 plays a role in the balance of progenitor fate determination preferring myofibrogenesis at the expense of adipogenesis. Progenitor NOTCH3 may constitute a tool to monitor replicative senescence and to limit AT dysfunction in obesity and aging.


Subject(s)
Cellular Senescence , Proteomics , Humans , Cellular Senescence/genetics , Adipose Tissue/metabolism , Aging/metabolism , Obesity/metabolism
3.
Cells ; 11(22)2022 11 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36428969

ABSTRACT

Adipose tissue (AT) expansion either through hypertrophy or hyperplasia is determinant in the link between obesity and metabolic alteration. The present study aims to profile the unhealthy subcutaneous and visceral AT (SAT, VAT) expansion in obesity and in the outcomes of bariatric surgery (BS). The repartition of adipocytes according to diameter and the numbers of progenitor subtypes and immune cells of SAT and VAT from 161 obese patients were determined by cell imaging and flow cytometry, respectively. Associations with insulin resistance (IR) prior to BS as well as with the loss of excessive weight (EWL) and IR at 1 and 3 years post-BS were studied; prior to BS, SAT and VAT, unhealthy expansions are characterized by the accumulation of adipogenic progenitors and CD4+ T lymphocytes and by adipocyte hypertrophy and elevated macrophage numbers, respectively. Such SAT stromal profile and VAT adipocyte hypertrophy are associated with adverse BS outcomes. Finally, myofibrogenic progenitors are a common determinant of weight and IR trajectories post-BS; the study suggests that adipogenesis in SAT and adipocyte hypertrophy in VAT are common determinants of metabolic alterations with obesity and of the weight loss and metabolic response to bariatric surgery. The data open up new avenues to better understand and predict individual outcomes in response to changes in energy balance.


Subject(s)
Bariatric Surgery , Insulin Resistance , Humans , Adipocytes/metabolism , Obesity/metabolism , Insulin Resistance/physiology , Stromal Cells/metabolism , Hypertrophy
4.
Biomedicines ; 10(10)2022 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36289874

ABSTRACT

The amount and the distribution of body fat exhibit trajectories that are sex- and human species-specific and both are determinants for health. The enhanced accumulation of fat in the truncal part of the body as a risk factor for cardiovascular and metabolic diseases is well supported by epidemiological studies. In addition, a possible independent protective role of the gluteofemoral fat compartment and of the brown adipose tissue is emerging. The present narrative review summarizes the current knowledge on sexual dimorphism in fat depot amount and repartition and consequences on cardiometabolic and reproductive health. The drivers of the sex differences and fat depot repartition, considered to be the results of complex interactions between sex determination pathways determined by the sex chromosome composition, genetic variability, sex hormones and the environment, are discussed. Finally, the inter- and intra-depot heterogeneity in adipocytes and progenitors, emphasized recently by unbiased large-scale approaches, is highlighted.

5.
Cancers (Basel) ; 13(12)2021 Jun 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34200994

ABSTRACT

In cancer, the lymphatic system is hijacked by tumor cells that escape from primary tumor and metastasize to the sentinel lymph nodes. Tumor lymphangiogenesis is stimulated by the vascular endothelial growth factors-C (VEGFC) after binding to its receptor VEGFR-3. However, how VEGFC cooperates with other molecules to promote lymphatics growth has not been fully determined. We showed that lymphangiogenesis developed in tumoral lesions and in surrounding adipose tissue (AT). Interestingly, lymphatic vessel density correlated with an increase in circulating free fatty acids (FFA) in the lymph from tumor-bearing mice. We showed that adipocyte-released FFA are uploaded by lymphatic endothelial cells (LEC) to stimulate their sprouting. Lipidomic analysis identified the monounsaturated oleic acid (OA) as the major circulating FFA in the lymph in a tumoral context. OA transporters FATP-3, -6 and CD36 were only upregulated on LEC in the presence of VEGFC showing a collaborative effect of these molecules. OA stimulates fatty acid ß-oxidation in LECs, leading to increased AT lymphangiogenesis. Our results provide new insights on the dialogue between tumors and adipocytes via the lymphatic system and identify a key role for adipocyte-derived FFA in the promotion of lymphangiogenesis, revealing novel therapeutic opportunities for inhibitors of lymphangiogenesis in cancer.

7.
J. physiol. biochem ; 74(4): 623-633, nov. 2018. tab, graf
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-179040

ABSTRACT

Tyramine is found in foodstuffs, the richest being cheeses, sausages, and wines. Tyramine has been recognized to release catecholamines from nerve endings and to trigger hypertensive reaction. Thereby, tyramine-free diet is recommended for depressed patients treated with irreversible inhibitors of monoamine oxidases (MAO) to limit the risk of hypertension. Tyramine is a substrate of amine oxidases and also an agonist at trace amine-associated receptors. Our aim was to characterize the dose-dependent effects of tyramine on human adipocyte metabolic functions. Lipolytic activity was determined in adipocytes from human subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue. Glycerol release was increased by a fourfold factor with classical lipolytic agents (1 μM isoprenaline, 1 mM isobutylmethylxanthine) while the amine was ineffective from 0.01 to 100 μM and hardly stimulatory at 1 mM. Tyramine exhibited a partial antilipolytic effect at 100 μM and 1 mM, which was similar to that of insulin but weaker than that obtained with agonists at purinergic A1 receptors, α2-adrenoceptors, or nicotinic acid receptors. Gi-protein blockade by Pertussis toxin abolished all these antilipolytic responses save that of tyramine. Indeed, tyramine antilipolytic effect was impaired by MAO-A inhibition. Tyramine inhibited protein tyrosine phosphatase activities in a manner sensitive to ascorbic acid and amine oxidase inhibitors. Thus, millimolar tyramine restrained lipolysis via the hydrogen peroxide it generates when oxidized by MAO. Since tyramine plasma levels have been reported to reach 0.2 μM after ingestion of 200 mg tyramine in healthy individuals, the direct effects we observed in vitro on adipocytes could be nutritionally relevant only when the MAO-dependent hepato-intestinal detoxifying system is overpassed


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Adult , Adrenergic Uptake Inhibitors/adverse effects , Subcutaneous Fat/metabolism , Tyramine/adverse effects , Adenylate Cyclase Toxin/pharmacology , Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Agonists/pharmacology , Adrenergic Uptake Inhibitors/chemistry , Adrenergic beta-Agonists/pharmacology , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Glycerol/metabolism , Subcutaneous Fat/cytology , Subcutaneous Fat , Tyramine/antagonists & inhibitors
8.
J Physiol Biochem ; 74(4): 623-633, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30039351

ABSTRACT

Tyramine is found in foodstuffs, the richest being cheeses, sausages, and wines. Tyramine has been recognized to release catecholamines from nerve endings and to trigger hypertensive reaction. Thereby, tyramine-free diet is recommended for depressed patients treated with irreversible inhibitors of monoamine oxidases (MAO) to limit the risk of hypertension. Tyramine is a substrate of amine oxidases and also an agonist at trace amine-associated receptors. Our aim was to characterize the dose-dependent effects of tyramine on human adipocyte metabolic functions. Lipolytic activity was determined in adipocytes from human subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue. Glycerol release was increased by a fourfold factor with classical lipolytic agents (1 µM isoprenaline, 1 mM isobutylmethylxanthine) while the amine was ineffective from 0.01 to 100 µM and hardly stimulatory at 1 mM. Tyramine exhibited a partial antilipolytic effect at 100 µM and 1 mM, which was similar to that of insulin but weaker than that obtained with agonists at purinergic A1 receptors, α2-adrenoceptors, or nicotinic acid receptors. Gi-protein blockade by Pertussis toxin abolished all these antilipolytic responses save that of tyramine. Indeed, tyramine antilipolytic effect was impaired by MAO-A inhibition. Tyramine inhibited protein tyrosine phosphatase activities in a manner sensitive to ascorbic acid and amine oxidase inhibitors. Thus, millimolar tyramine restrained lipolysis via the hydrogen peroxide it generates when oxidized by MAO. Since tyramine plasma levels have been reported to reach 0.2 µM after ingestion of 200 mg tyramine in healthy individuals, the direct effects we observed in vitro on adipocytes could be nutritionally relevant only when the MAO-dependent hepato-intestinal detoxifying system is overpassed.


Subject(s)
Adrenergic Uptake Inhibitors/adverse effects , Lipolysis , Subcutaneous Fat, Abdominal/metabolism , Tyramine/adverse effects , Adenylate Cyclase Toxin/pharmacology , Adrenergic Uptake Inhibitors/chemistry , Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Agonists/pharmacology , Adrenergic beta-Agonists/pharmacology , Adult , Cells, Cultured , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Female , Glycerol/metabolism , Humans , Hydrogen Peroxide/metabolism , Hypoglycemic Agents/pharmacology , Insulin/pharmacology , Kinetics , Lipolysis/drug effects , Monoamine Oxidase/chemistry , Monoamine Oxidase/metabolism , Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Phosphodiesterase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/antagonists & inhibitors , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/metabolism , Plastic Surgery Procedures , Subcutaneous Fat, Abdominal/cytology , Subcutaneous Fat, Abdominal/drug effects , Tyramine/antagonists & inhibitors
9.
Br J Pharmacol ; 175(12): 2428-2440, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29582416

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Phenelzine is an antidepressant drug known to increase the risk of hypertensive crisis when dietary tyramine is not restricted. However, this MAO inhibitor inhibits other enzymes not limited to the nervous system. Here we investigated if its antiadipogenic and antilipogenic effects in cultured adipocytes could contribute to decreased body fat in vivo, without unwanted hypertensive or cardiovascular effects. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: Mice were fed a standard chow and given 0.028% phenelzine in drinking water for 12 weeks. Body composition was determined by NMR. Cardiovascular dysfunction was assessed by heart rate variability analyses and by evaluation of cardiac oxidative stress markers. MAO activity, hydrogen peroxide release and triacylglycerol turnover were assayed in white adipose tissue (WAT), alongside determination of glucose and lipid circulating levels. KEY RESULTS: Phenelzine-treated mice exhibited lower body fat content, subcutaneous WAT mass and lipid content in skeletal muscles than control, without decreased body weight gain or food consumption. A modest alteration of cardiac sympathovagal balance occurred without depressed aconitase activity. In WAT, phenelzine impaired the lipogenic but not the antilipolytic actions of insulin, MAO activity and hydrogen peroxide release. Phenelzine treatment lowered non-fasting blood glucose and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase expression. In vitro, high doses of phenelzine decreased both lipolytic and lipogenic responses in mouse adipocytes. CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS: As phenelzine reduced body fat content without affecting cardiovascular function in mice, it may be of benefit in the treatment of obesity-associated complications, with the precautions of use recommended for antidepressant therapy.


Subject(s)
Adipose Tissue/drug effects , Antidepressive Agents/pharmacology , Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Monoamine Oxidase/metabolism , Phenelzine/pharmacology , Adipose Tissue/metabolism , Administration, Oral , Animals , Antidepressive Agents/administration & dosage , Cardiovascular System/drug effects , Cardiovascular System/metabolism , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors/administration & dosage , Phenelzine/administration & dosage
10.
World J Diabetes ; 9(1): 25-32, 2018 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29359026

ABSTRACT

AIM: To study complete dose-dependent effects of obestatin on lipolytic and glucose transport activities in human adipocyte preparations highly responsive to insulin. METHODS: Adipocytes were prepared by liberase digestion from subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue obtained from overweight subjects undergoing plastic surgery. The index of lipolytic activity was the glycerol released in the incubation medium, while glucose transport was assessed by [3H]-2-deoxyglucose uptake assay. RESULTS: When tested from 0.1 nmol/L to 1 µmol/L, obestatin did not stimulate glycerol release; it did not inhibit the lipolytic effect of isoprenaline and did not alter the insulin antilipolytic effect. Obestatin hardly activated glucose transport at 1 µmol/L only. Moreover, the obestatin stimulation effect was clearly lower than the threefold increase induced by insulin 100 nmol/L. CONCLUSION: Low doses of obestatin cannot directly influence lipolysis and glucose uptake in human fat cells.

11.
Bio Protoc ; 8(3): e2711, 2018 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34179253

ABSTRACT

Most studies of human adipose tissue (AT) metabolism and functionality have been performed in vitro on isolated mature adipocyte or in situ using the microdialysis technique (Lafontan, 2012). However, these approaches have several limitations. The use of mature isolated adipocytes is limiting as adipocytes are not in their physiological environment and the collagenase digestion process could affect both adipocyte survival and functionality. While metabolic studies using microdialysis have brought the advantage of studying the lipolytic response of the adipose tissue in situ, it provides only qualitative measures but does not give any information on the contribution of different adipose tissue cell components. Moreover, the number of microdialysis probes that can be used concomitantly in one subject is limited and can be influenced by local blood flow changes and by the molecular size cut-off of the microdialysis probe. Here we present a protocol to assess adipose tissue functionality ex vivo in AT explants allowing the studies of adipose tissue in its whole context, for several hours. In addition, the isolation of the different cell components to evaluate the cell-specific impact of lipolysis can be performed. We recently used the present protocol and demonstrated that fatty acid release during lipolysis impacts directly on a specific cell subset present in the adipose tissue stroma-vascular compartment. This assay can be adapted to address other research questions such as the effects of hormones or drugs treatment on the phenotype of the various cell types present in adipose tissue ( Gao et al., 2016 ).

12.
J. physiol. biochem ; 73(3): 475-486, ago. 2017. tab, graf
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-178898

ABSTRACT

Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO), identical to primary amine oxidase or vascular adhesion protein-1, is a membrane enzyme that generates hydrogen peroxide. SSAO is highly expressed at the adipocyte surface, and its plasma levels increase with type 2 diabetes. Since visceral adipose tissue (AT) is more tightly associated with obesity complications than subcutaneous (SC) abdominal fat, we compared SSAO activity in plasma and 4 distinct AT locations in 48 severely obese women (body mass index (BMI), averaging 54 ± 11 kg/m2), with or without a dysmetabolic profile. Higher glucose and triacylglycerol levels vs lower high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol characterized dysmetabolic women (DYS; n = 25) from non-dysmetabolic (NDYS; n = 23), age- and weight-matched subjects. SC, mesenteric (ME), omental (OM), and round ligament (RL) fat locations were collected during bariatric surgery. SSAO capacity to oxidize up to 1 mM benzylamine was determined in AT and plasma with radiometric and fluorimetric methods. Plasma SSAO was higher in the DYS group. SSAO activity was higher in fat than in plasma, when expressed as radiolabeled benzaldehyde per milligram of protein. In ATs from DYS women, protein content was 10 % higher, and basal hydrogen peroxide release lower than in NDYS subjects, except for RL location. The SSAO affinity towards benzylamine did not exhibit regional variation and was not altered by a dysmetabolic profile (K m averaging 184 ± 7 μM; n = 183). Although radiometric and fluorimetric methods gave different estimates of oxidase activity, both indicated that AT SSAO activity did not vary according to anatomical location and/or metabolic status in severely obese women


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Adipose Tissue, White/enzymology , Amine Oxidase (Copper-Containing)/blood , Metabolic Diseases/enzymology , Obesity, Morbid/enzymology , Amine Oxidase (Copper-Containing)/chemistry , Benzylamines/chemistry , Hydrogen Peroxide/chemistry , Kinetics , Obesity, Morbid/blood , Organ Specificity
13.
Stem Cells ; 35(7): 1799-1814, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28470788

ABSTRACT

White adipose tissue (WAT) expands in part through adipogenesis, a process involving fat cell generation and fatty acid (FA) storage into triglycerides (TGs). Several findings suggest that inter-individual and regional variations in adipogenesis are linked to metabolic complications. We aimed to identify cellular markers that define human adipocyte progenitors (APs) with pronounced adipogenic/TG storage ability. Using an unbiased single cell screen of passaged human adipose-derived stromal cells (hADSCs), we identified cell clones with similar proliferation rates but discordant capabilities to undergo adipogenic differentiation. Transcriptomic analyses prior to induction of differentiation showed that adipogenic clones displayed a significantly higher expression of CD36, encoding the scavenger receptor CD36. CD36+ hADSCs, in comparison with CD36-cells, displayed almost complete adipogenic differentiation while CD36 RNAi attenuated lipid accumulation. Similar findings were observed in primary CD45-/CD34+/CD31-APs isolated from human WAT where the subpopulation of MSCA1+/CD36+ cells displayed a significantly higher differentiation degree/TG storage capacity than MSCA1+/CD36-cells. Functional analyses in vitro and ex vivo confirmed that CD36 conferred APs an increased capacity to take up FAs thereby facilitating terminal differentiation. Among primary APs from subcutaneous femoral, abdominal and visceral human WAT, the fraction of CD36+ cells was significantly higher in depots associated with higher adipogenesis and reduced metabolic risk (i.e., femoral WAT). We conclude that CD36 marks APs with pronounced adipogenic potential, most probably by facilitating lipid uptake. This may be of value in developing human adipocyte cell clones and possibly in linking regional variations in adipogenesis to metabolic phenotype. Stem Cells 2017;35:1799-1814.


Subject(s)
Adipocytes, White/metabolism , Adipose Tissue, White/metabolism , CD36 Antigens/genetics , Stem Cells/metabolism , Transcriptome , Triglycerides/metabolism , Adipocytes, White/cytology , Adipogenesis/genetics , Adipose Tissue, White/cytology , Adult , Antigens, CD34/genetics , Antigens, CD34/metabolism , Antigens, Surface/genetics , Antigens, Surface/metabolism , Biological Transport , CD36 Antigens/antagonists & inhibitors , CD36 Antigens/metabolism , Cell Differentiation , Cell Proliferation , Female , Gene Expression Profiling , Humans , Leukocyte Common Antigens/genetics , Leukocyte Common Antigens/metabolism , Middle Aged , Primary Cell Culture , RNA, Small Interfering/genetics , RNA, Small Interfering/metabolism , Single-Cell Analysis , Stem Cells/cytology
14.
World J Diabetes ; 8(4): 143-153, 2017 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28465791

ABSTRACT

AIM: To assess in rodent and human adipocytes the antilipolytic capacity of hexaquis(benzylammonium) decavanadate (B6V10), previously shown to exert antidiabetic effects in rodent models, such as lowering free fatty acids (FFA) and glucose circulating levels. METHODS: Adipose tissue (AT) samples were obtained after informed consent from overweight women undergoing plastic surgery. Comparison of the effects of B6V10 and reference antilipolytic agents (insulin, benzylamine, vanadate) on the lipolytic activity was performed on adipocytes freshly isolated from rat, mouse and human AT. Glycerol release was measured using colorimetric assay as an index of lipolytic activity. The influence of B6V10 and reference agents on glucose transport into human fat cells was determined using the radiolabelled 2-deoxyglucose uptake assay. RESULTS: In all the species studied, B6V10 exhibited a dose-dependent inhibition of adipocyte lipolysis when triglyceride breakdown was moderately enhanced by ß-adrenergic receptor stimulation. B6V10 exerted on human adipocyte a maximal lipolysis inhibition of glycerol release that was stronger than that elicited by insulin. However, B6V10 did not inhibit basal and maximally stimulated lipolysis. When incubated at dose ≥ 10 µmol/L, B6V10 stimulated by twofold the glucose uptake in human fat cells, but - similarly to benzylamine - without reaching the maximal effect of insulin, while it reproduced one-half of the insulin-stimulation of lipogenesis in mouse fat cells. CONCLUSION: B6V10 exerts insulin-like actions in adipocytes, including lipolysis inhibition and glucose transport activation. B6V10 may be useful in limiting lipotoxicity related to obesity and insulin resistance.

15.
J Physiol Biochem ; 73(3): 475-486, 2016 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27766585

ABSTRACT

Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO), identical to primary amine oxidase or vascular adhesion protein-1, is a membrane enzyme that generates hydrogen peroxide. SSAO is highly expressed at the adipocyte surface, and its plasma levels increase with type 2 diabetes. Since visceral adipose tissue (AT) is more tightly associated with obesity complications than subcutaneous (SC) abdominal fat, we compared SSAO activity in plasma and 4 distinct AT locations in 48 severely obese women (body mass index (BMI), averaging 54 ± 11 kg/m2), with or without a dysmetabolic profile. Higher glucose and triacylglycerol levels vs lower high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol characterized dysmetabolic women (DYS; n = 25) from non-dysmetabolic (NDYS; n = 23), age- and weight-matched subjects. SC, mesenteric (ME), omental (OM), and round ligament (RL) fat locations were collected during bariatric surgery. SSAO capacity to oxidize up to 1 mM benzylamine was determined in AT and plasma with radiometric and fluorimetric methods. Plasma SSAO was higher in the DYS group. SSAO activity was higher in fat than in plasma, when expressed as radiolabeled benzaldehyde per milligram of protein. In ATs from DYS women, protein content was 10 % higher, and basal hydrogen peroxide release lower than in NDYS subjects, except for RL location. The SSAO affinity towards benzylamine did not exhibit regional variation and was not altered by a dysmetabolic profile (K m averaging 184 ± 7 µM; n = 183). Although radiometric and fluorimetric methods gave different estimates of oxidase activity, both indicated that AT SSAO activity did not vary according to anatomical location and/or metabolic status in severely obese women.


Subject(s)
Adipose Tissue, White/enzymology , Amine Oxidase (Copper-Containing)/blood , Metabolic Diseases/enzymology , Obesity, Morbid/enzymology , Adult , Amine Oxidase (Copper-Containing)/chemistry , Benzylamines/chemistry , Female , Humans , Hydrogen Peroxide/chemistry , Kinetics , Middle Aged , Obesity, Morbid/blood , Organ Specificity
16.
Stem Cells Int ; 2016: 1815982, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26839555

ABSTRACT

Our knowledge about mesenchymal stem cells has considerably grown in the last years. Since the proof of concept of the existence of such cells in the 70s by Friedenstein et al., a growing mass of reports were conducted for a better definition of these cells and for the reevaluation from the term "mesenchymal stem cells" to the term "mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs)." Being more than a semantic shift, concepts behind this new terminology reveal the complexity and the heterogeneity of the cells grouped in MSC family especially as these cells are present in nearly all adult tissues. Recently, mesenchymal stromal cell antigen-1 (MSCA-1)/tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP) was described as a new cell surface marker of MSCs from different tissues. The alkaline phosphatase activity of this protein could be involved in wide range of MSC features described below from cell differentiation to immunomodulatory properties, as well as occurrence of pathologies. The present review aims to decipher and summarize the role of TNAP in progenitor cells from different tissues focusing preferentially on brain, bone marrow, and adipose tissue.

17.
J. physiol. biochem ; 71(3): 497-507, sept. 2015.
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-142446

ABSTRACT

The mechanisms underlying the relationships between nutritional status and immunity remain to be fully characterized. The present study was undertaken to analyze by flow cytometry, in the context of diet-induced obesity, the status of immune cells in subcutaneous, and epididymal fat depots in wild-type and immunodeficient Rag2−/− mice submitted to nutritional challenge, i.e., 48-h fasting and 1-week refeeding. In parallel, the responsiveness of mature adipocytes and immune cells in bone marrow, lymph node, and liver were also analyzed. The results show that fasting in obese wild-type mice induces a prominent lipolysis in epididymal AT and immunosuppression restricted to both subcutaneous and epididymal AT, characterized by reduced number of CD4+ T and B lymphocytes and M1/M2 macrophages associated with reduced leptin and increased FGF21 expression in mature adipocytes. One-week refeeding was sufficient to reverse the fasting-induced effects. Obese immunodeficient mice under nutritional challenge exhibited no changes in adipocyte leptin expression and no marked trafficking of AT macrophages or NK cells, while the fasted-induced upregulation of FGF21 expression was maintained as well as the lipolytic responses. The present results demonstrate that, in a context of diet-induced obesity, fasting-induced immunosuppression is restricted to fat depots in immunocompetent mice. Lack of adipocyte leptin regulation and fasting-induced immunosuppression in obese immunodeficient mice strongly suggests that lymphocytes are involved in the modulation of adipocyte leptin expression on one hand and on the other that leptin is involved in the immune changes in AT according to nutritional status


Subject(s)
Animals , Rats , Leptin/pharmacokinetics , Lymphocytes/physiology , Obesity/physiopathology , Inflammation/physiopathology , Immunity/physiology , Nutritional Status/physiology , Flow Cytometry , Refeeding Syndrome/physiopathology , Diet, High-Fat , Macrophages/physiology , Disease Models, Animal
18.
J Physiol Biochem ; 71(3): 497-507, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25670497

ABSTRACT

The mechanisms underlying the relationships between nutritional status and immunity remain to be fully characterized. The present study was undertaken to analyze by flow cytometry, in the context of diet-induced obesity, the status of immune cells in subcutaneous, and epididymal fat depots in wild-type and immunodeficient Rag2-/- mice submitted to nutritional challenge, i.e., 48-h fasting and 1-week refeeding. In parallel, the responsiveness of mature adipocytes and immune cells in bone marrow, lymph node, and liver were also analyzed. The results show that fasting in obese wild-type mice induces a prominent lipolysis in epididymal AT and immunosuppression restricted to both subcutaneous and epididymal AT, characterized by reduced number of CD4+ T and B lymphocytes and M1/M2 macrophages associated with reduced leptin and increased FGF21 expression in mature adipocytes. One-week refeeding was sufficient to reverse the fasting-induced effects. Obese immunodeficient mice under nutritional challenge exhibited no changes in adipocyte leptin expression and no marked trafficking of AT macrophages or NK cells, while the fasted-induced upregulation of FGF21 expression was maintained as well as the lipolytic responses. The present results demonstrate that, in a context of diet-induced obesity, fasting-induced immunosuppression is restricted to fat depots in immunocompetent mice. Lack of adipocyte leptin regulation and fasting-induced immunosuppression in obese immunodeficient mice strongly suggests that lymphocytes are involved in the modulation of adipocyte leptin expression on one hand and on the other that leptin is involved in the immune changes in AT according to nutritional status.


Subject(s)
Leptin/physiology , Lymphocytes/physiology , Obesity/metabolism , Animals , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Diet, High-Fat/adverse effects , Immune Tolerance , Liver/immunology , Liver/metabolism , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Obesity/etiology , Obesity/immunology , Subcutaneous Fat/immunology , Subcutaneous Fat/metabolism , Subcutaneous Fat/pathology
19.
Stem Cells ; 33(4): 1277-91, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25523907

ABSTRACT

Obesity-associated inflammation contributes to the development of metabolic diseases. Although brite adipocytes have been shown to ameliorate metabolic parameters in rodents, their origin and differentiation remain to be characterized in humans. Native CD45-/CD34+/CD31- cells have been previously described as human adipocyte progenitors. Using two additional cell surface markers, MSCA1 (tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase) and CD271 (nerve growth factor receptor), we are able to partition the CD45-/CD34+/CD31- cell population into three subsets. We establish serum-free culture conditions without cell expansion to promote either white/brite adipogenesis using rosiglitazone, or bone morphogenetic protein 7 (BMP7), or specifically brite adipogenesis using 3-isobuthyl-1-methylxanthine. We demonstrate that adipogenesis leads to an increase of MSCA1 activity, expression of white/brite adipocyte-related genes, and mitochondriogenesis. Using pharmacological inhibition and gene silencing approaches, we show that MSCA1 activity is required for triglyceride accumulation and for the expression of white/brite-related genes in human cells. Moreover, native immunoselected MSCA1+ cells exhibit brite precursor characteristics and the highest adipogenic potential of the three progenitor subsets. Finally, we provided evidence that MSCA1+ white/brite precursors accumulate with obesity in subcutaneous adipose tissue (sAT), and that local BMP7 and inflammation regulate brite adipogenesis by modulating MSCA1 in human sAT. The accumulation of MSCA1+ white/brite precursors in sAT with obesity may reveal a blockade of their differentiation by immune cells, suggesting that local inflammation contributes to metabolic disorders through impairment of white/brite adipogenesis. Stem Cells 2015;33:1277-1291.


Subject(s)
Adipocytes, White/immunology , Adipocytes, White/metabolism , Adipogenesis/physiology , Antigens, Surface/biosynthesis , Immunity, Cellular/physiology , Adult , Aged , Cells, Cultured , Female , Humans , Middle Aged
20.
J. physiol. biochem ; 69(3): 575-583, sept. 2013.
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-121676

ABSTRACT

Human abdominal adipose tissue (AAT) can be divided into two compartments according to anatomical location to dermis layer, i.e. superficial and deep compartments (sAAT and dAAT). In morbidly obese patients, dAAT mass has been linked to obesity-associated pathologies. In the present study, we characterized in overweight healthy individuals human sAAT and dAAT cellular composition and adipogenic potential. Twelve paired sAAT and dAAT samples were collected. sAAT compared to dAAT adipocytes are larger. In agreement with increased size, real-time PCR analyses performed on isolated adipocytes showed that sAAT adipocytes exhibited higher leptin transcript levels but also higher expression of genes involved in metabolism including hormone-sensitive lipase compared to dAAT adipocytes. Flow cytometry analyses performed on stroma-vascular fraction (SVF) showed no difference in the numbers of progenitor cells, endothelial cells and macrophages between sAAT and dAAT. Macrophage phenotypes were not distinct between both AAT compartments. However, CD3+ T lymphocyte number was higher in dAAT than in sAAT. Adipogenic potential of dAAT SVF was lower than sAAT SVF whereas the one of isolated progenitor cells was not distinct whatever the AAT compartments. Therefore, in overweight patients, both sAAT and dAAT compartments exhibit differences in terms of adipocytes and T lymphocyte accumulation. dAAT is characterized by higher T lymphocyte accumulation together with smaller less metabolically active adipocytes. The lower adipogenic potential of dAAT SVF is not due to intrinsic progenitor cell properties but more likely to the increased T lymphocyte accumulation (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Adipose Tissue/ultrastructure , Subcutaneous Fat/ultrastructure , Overweight , Obesity, Morbid , Obesity, Abdominal , Stem Cells/physiology , T-Lymphocytes/physiology
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