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Adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans
OBJECTIVE: Glycogen metabolism has emerged as a mediator in the control of energy homeostasis and studies in murine models reveal that adipose tissue might contain glycogen stores. Here we investigated the physio(patho)logical role of glycogen in human adipose tissue in the context of obesity and in...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Elsevier
2015
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4703799/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26844203 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2015.10.001 |
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author | Ceperuelo-Mallafré, Victòria Ejarque, Miriam Serena, Carolina Duran, Xavier Montori-Grau, Marta Rodríguez, Miguel Angel Yanes, Oscar Núñez-Roa, Catalina Roche, Kelly Puthanveetil, Prasanth Garrido-Sánchez, Lourdes Saez, Enrique Tinahones, Francisco J. Garcia-Roves, Pablo M. Gómez-Foix, Anna Ma Saltiel, Alan R. Vendrell, Joan Fernández-Veledo, Sonia |
author_facet | Ceperuelo-Mallafré, Victòria Ejarque, Miriam Serena, Carolina Duran, Xavier Montori-Grau, Marta Rodríguez, Miguel Angel Yanes, Oscar Núñez-Roa, Catalina Roche, Kelly Puthanveetil, Prasanth Garrido-Sánchez, Lourdes Saez, Enrique Tinahones, Francisco J. Garcia-Roves, Pablo M. Gómez-Foix, Anna Ma Saltiel, Alan R. Vendrell, Joan Fernández-Veledo, Sonia |
author_sort | Ceperuelo-Mallafré, Victòria |
collection | PubMed |
description | OBJECTIVE: Glycogen metabolism has emerged as a mediator in the control of energy homeostasis and studies in murine models reveal that adipose tissue might contain glycogen stores. Here we investigated the physio(patho)logical role of glycogen in human adipose tissue in the context of obesity and insulin resistance. METHODS: We studied glucose metabolic flux of hypoxic human adipoctyes by nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry-based metabolic approaches. Glycogen synthesis and glycogen content in response to hypoxia was analyzed in human adipocytes and macrophages. To explore the metabolic effects of enforced glycogen deposition in adipocytes and macrophages, we overexpressed PTG, the only glycogen-associated regulatory subunit (PP1-GTS) reported in murine adipocytes. Adipose tissue gene expression analysis was performed on wild type and homozygous PTG KO male mice. Finally, glycogen metabolism gene expression and glycogen accumulation was analyzed in adipose tissue, mature adipocytes and resident macrophages from lean and obese subjects with different degrees of insulin resistance in 2 independent cohorts. RESULTS: We show that hypoxia modulates glucose metabolic flux in human adipocytes and macrophages and promotes glycogenesis. Enforced glycogen deposition by overexpression of PTG re-orients adipocyte secretion to a pro-inflammatory response linked to insulin resistance and monocyte/lymphocyte migration. Furthermore, glycogen accumulation is associated with inhibition of mTORC1 signaling and increased basal autophagy flux, correlating with greater leptin release in glycogen-loaded adipocytes. PTG-KO mice have reduced expression of key inflammatory genes in adipose tissue and PTG overexpression in M0 macrophages induces a pro-inflammatory and glycolytic M1 phenotype. Increased glycogen synthase expression correlates with glycogen deposition in subcutaneous adipose tissue of obese patients. Glycogen content in subcutaneous mature adipocytes is associated with BMI and leptin expression. CONCLUSION: Our data establish glycogen mishandling in adipose tissue as a potential key feature of inflammatory-related metabolic stress in human obesity. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-4703799 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2015 |
publisher | Elsevier |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-47037992016-02-03 Adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans Ceperuelo-Mallafré, Victòria Ejarque, Miriam Serena, Carolina Duran, Xavier Montori-Grau, Marta Rodríguez, Miguel Angel Yanes, Oscar Núñez-Roa, Catalina Roche, Kelly Puthanveetil, Prasanth Garrido-Sánchez, Lourdes Saez, Enrique Tinahones, Francisco J. Garcia-Roves, Pablo M. Gómez-Foix, Anna Ma Saltiel, Alan R. Vendrell, Joan Fernández-Veledo, Sonia Mol Metab Original Article OBJECTIVE: Glycogen metabolism has emerged as a mediator in the control of energy homeostasis and studies in murine models reveal that adipose tissue might contain glycogen stores. Here we investigated the physio(patho)logical role of glycogen in human adipose tissue in the context of obesity and insulin resistance. METHODS: We studied glucose metabolic flux of hypoxic human adipoctyes by nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry-based metabolic approaches. Glycogen synthesis and glycogen content in response to hypoxia was analyzed in human adipocytes and macrophages. To explore the metabolic effects of enforced glycogen deposition in adipocytes and macrophages, we overexpressed PTG, the only glycogen-associated regulatory subunit (PP1-GTS) reported in murine adipocytes. Adipose tissue gene expression analysis was performed on wild type and homozygous PTG KO male mice. Finally, glycogen metabolism gene expression and glycogen accumulation was analyzed in adipose tissue, mature adipocytes and resident macrophages from lean and obese subjects with different degrees of insulin resistance in 2 independent cohorts. RESULTS: We show that hypoxia modulates glucose metabolic flux in human adipocytes and macrophages and promotes glycogenesis. Enforced glycogen deposition by overexpression of PTG re-orients adipocyte secretion to a pro-inflammatory response linked to insulin resistance and monocyte/lymphocyte migration. Furthermore, glycogen accumulation is associated with inhibition of mTORC1 signaling and increased basal autophagy flux, correlating with greater leptin release in glycogen-loaded adipocytes. PTG-KO mice have reduced expression of key inflammatory genes in adipose tissue and PTG overexpression in M0 macrophages induces a pro-inflammatory and glycolytic M1 phenotype. Increased glycogen synthase expression correlates with glycogen deposition in subcutaneous adipose tissue of obese patients. Glycogen content in subcutaneous mature adipocytes is associated with BMI and leptin expression. CONCLUSION: Our data establish glycogen mishandling in adipose tissue as a potential key feature of inflammatory-related metabolic stress in human obesity. Elsevier 2015-10-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4703799/ /pubmed/26844203 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2015.10.001 Text en © 2015 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Original Article Ceperuelo-Mallafré, Victòria Ejarque, Miriam Serena, Carolina Duran, Xavier Montori-Grau, Marta Rodríguez, Miguel Angel Yanes, Oscar Núñez-Roa, Catalina Roche, Kelly Puthanveetil, Prasanth Garrido-Sánchez, Lourdes Saez, Enrique Tinahones, Francisco J. Garcia-Roves, Pablo M. Gómez-Foix, Anna Ma Saltiel, Alan R. Vendrell, Joan Fernández-Veledo, Sonia Adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans |
title | Adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans |
title_full | Adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans |
title_fullStr | Adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans |
title_full_unstemmed | Adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans |
title_short | Adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans |
title_sort | adipose tissue glycogen accumulation is associated with obesity-linked inflammation in humans |
topic | Original Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4703799/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26844203 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2015.10.001 |
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