Cargando…

Exercise Equals the Mobilization of Visceral versus Subcutaneous Adipose Fatty Acid Molecules in Fasted Rats Associated with the Modulation of the AMPK/ATGL/HSL Axis

Combining exercise with fasting is known to boost fat mass-loss, but detailed analysis on the consequential mobilization of visceral and subcutaneous WAT-derived fatty acids has not been performed. In this study, a subset of fasted male rats (66 h) was submitted to daily bouts of mild exercise. Subs...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zotti, Tiziana, Giacco, Antonia, Cuomo, Arianna, Cerulo, Luigi, Petito, Giuseppe, Iervolino, Stefania, Senese, Rosalba, Cioffi, Federica, Vito, Pasquale, Cardinale, Gaetano, Silvestri, Elena, Lombardi, Assunta, Moreno, Maria, Lanni, Antonia, de Lange, Pieter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10386727/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37513513
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15143095
_version_ 1785081739283005440
author Zotti, Tiziana
Giacco, Antonia
Cuomo, Arianna
Cerulo, Luigi
Petito, Giuseppe
Iervolino, Stefania
Senese, Rosalba
Cioffi, Federica
Vito, Pasquale
Cardinale, Gaetano
Silvestri, Elena
Lombardi, Assunta
Moreno, Maria
Lanni, Antonia
de Lange, Pieter
author_facet Zotti, Tiziana
Giacco, Antonia
Cuomo, Arianna
Cerulo, Luigi
Petito, Giuseppe
Iervolino, Stefania
Senese, Rosalba
Cioffi, Federica
Vito, Pasquale
Cardinale, Gaetano
Silvestri, Elena
Lombardi, Assunta
Moreno, Maria
Lanni, Antonia
de Lange, Pieter
author_sort Zotti, Tiziana
collection PubMed
description Combining exercise with fasting is known to boost fat mass-loss, but detailed analysis on the consequential mobilization of visceral and subcutaneous WAT-derived fatty acids has not been performed. In this study, a subset of fasted male rats (66 h) was submitted to daily bouts of mild exercise. Subsequently, by using gas chromatography—flame ionization detection, the content of 22 fatty acids (FA) in visceral (v) versus subcutaneous (sc) white adipose tissue (WAT) depots was compared to those found in response to the separate events. Findings were related to those obtained in serum and liver samples, the latter taking up FA to increase gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis. Each separate intervention reduced scWAT FA content, associated with increased levels of adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) protein despite unaltered AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) Thr172 phosphorylation, known to induce ATGL expression. The mobility of FAs from vWAT during fasting was absent with the exception of the MUFA 16:1 n-7 and only induced by combining fasting with exercise which was accompanied with reduced hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) Ser563 and increased Ser565 phosphorylation, whereas ATGL protein levels were elevated during fasting in association with the persistently increased phosphorylation of AMPK at Thr172 both during fasting and in response to the combined intervention. As expected, liver FA content increased during fasting, and was not further affected by exercise, despite additional FA release from vWAT in this condition, underlining increased hepatic FA metabolism. Both fasting and its combination with exercise showed preferential hepatic metabolism of the prominent saturated FAs C:16 and C:18 compared to the unsaturated FAs 18:1 n-9 and 18:2 n-6:1. In conclusion, depot-specific differences in WAT fatty acid molecule release during fasting, irrelevant to their degree of saturation or chain length, are mitigated when combined with exercise, to provide fuel to surrounding organs such as the liver which is correlated with increased ATGL/ HSL ratios, involving AMPK only in vWAT.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10386727
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103867272023-07-30 Exercise Equals the Mobilization of Visceral versus Subcutaneous Adipose Fatty Acid Molecules in Fasted Rats Associated with the Modulation of the AMPK/ATGL/HSL Axis Zotti, Tiziana Giacco, Antonia Cuomo, Arianna Cerulo, Luigi Petito, Giuseppe Iervolino, Stefania Senese, Rosalba Cioffi, Federica Vito, Pasquale Cardinale, Gaetano Silvestri, Elena Lombardi, Assunta Moreno, Maria Lanni, Antonia de Lange, Pieter Nutrients Article Combining exercise with fasting is known to boost fat mass-loss, but detailed analysis on the consequential mobilization of visceral and subcutaneous WAT-derived fatty acids has not been performed. In this study, a subset of fasted male rats (66 h) was submitted to daily bouts of mild exercise. Subsequently, by using gas chromatography—flame ionization detection, the content of 22 fatty acids (FA) in visceral (v) versus subcutaneous (sc) white adipose tissue (WAT) depots was compared to those found in response to the separate events. Findings were related to those obtained in serum and liver samples, the latter taking up FA to increase gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis. Each separate intervention reduced scWAT FA content, associated with increased levels of adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) protein despite unaltered AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) Thr172 phosphorylation, known to induce ATGL expression. The mobility of FAs from vWAT during fasting was absent with the exception of the MUFA 16:1 n-7 and only induced by combining fasting with exercise which was accompanied with reduced hormone sensitive lipase (HSL) Ser563 and increased Ser565 phosphorylation, whereas ATGL protein levels were elevated during fasting in association with the persistently increased phosphorylation of AMPK at Thr172 both during fasting and in response to the combined intervention. As expected, liver FA content increased during fasting, and was not further affected by exercise, despite additional FA release from vWAT in this condition, underlining increased hepatic FA metabolism. Both fasting and its combination with exercise showed preferential hepatic metabolism of the prominent saturated FAs C:16 and C:18 compared to the unsaturated FAs 18:1 n-9 and 18:2 n-6:1. In conclusion, depot-specific differences in WAT fatty acid molecule release during fasting, irrelevant to their degree of saturation or chain length, are mitigated when combined with exercise, to provide fuel to surrounding organs such as the liver which is correlated with increased ATGL/ HSL ratios, involving AMPK only in vWAT. MDPI 2023-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10386727/ /pubmed/37513513 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15143095 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Zotti, Tiziana
Giacco, Antonia
Cuomo, Arianna
Cerulo, Luigi
Petito, Giuseppe
Iervolino, Stefania
Senese, Rosalba
Cioffi, Federica
Vito, Pasquale
Cardinale, Gaetano
Silvestri, Elena
Lombardi, Assunta
Moreno, Maria
Lanni, Antonia
de Lange, Pieter
Exercise Equals the Mobilization of Visceral versus Subcutaneous Adipose Fatty Acid Molecules in Fasted Rats Associated with the Modulation of the AMPK/ATGL/HSL Axis
title Exercise Equals the Mobilization of Visceral versus Subcutaneous Adipose Fatty Acid Molecules in Fasted Rats Associated with the Modulation of the AMPK/ATGL/HSL Axis
title_full Exercise Equals the Mobilization of Visceral versus Subcutaneous Adipose Fatty Acid Molecules in Fasted Rats Associated with the Modulation of the AMPK/ATGL/HSL Axis
title_fullStr Exercise Equals the Mobilization of Visceral versus Subcutaneous Adipose Fatty Acid Molecules in Fasted Rats Associated with the Modulation of the AMPK/ATGL/HSL Axis
title_full_unstemmed Exercise Equals the Mobilization of Visceral versus Subcutaneous Adipose Fatty Acid Molecules in Fasted Rats Associated with the Modulation of the AMPK/ATGL/HSL Axis
title_short Exercise Equals the Mobilization of Visceral versus Subcutaneous Adipose Fatty Acid Molecules in Fasted Rats Associated with the Modulation of the AMPK/ATGL/HSL Axis
title_sort exercise equals the mobilization of visceral versus subcutaneous adipose fatty acid molecules in fasted rats associated with the modulation of the ampk/atgl/hsl axis
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10386727/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37513513
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15143095
work_keys_str_mv AT zottitiziana exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT giaccoantonia exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT cuomoarianna exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT ceruloluigi exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT petitogiuseppe exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT iervolinostefania exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT seneserosalba exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT cioffifederica exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT vitopasquale exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT cardinalegaetano exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT silvestrielena exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT lombardiassunta exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT morenomaria exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT lanniantonia exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis
AT delangepieter exerciseequalsthemobilizationofvisceralversussubcutaneousadiposefattyacidmoleculesinfastedratsassociatedwiththemodulationoftheampkatglhslaxis