l-Arginine Induces White Adipose Tissue Browning-A New Pharmaceutical Alternative to Cold.
Andjelika KalezicAleksandra KoraćBato KoracAleksandra JankovicPublished in: Pharmaceutics (2022)
The beneficial effects of l-arginine supplementation in obesity and type II diabetes involve white adipose tissue (WAT) reduction and increased substrate oxidation. We aimed to test the potential of l-arginine to induce WAT browning. Therefore, the molecular basis of browning was investigated in retroperitoneal WAT (rpWAT) of rats exposed to cold or treated with 2.25% l-arginine for 1, 3, and 7 days. Compared to untreated control, levels of inducible nitric oxide (NO) synthase protein expression and NO signaling increased in both cold-exposed and l-arginine-treated groups. These increases coincided with the appearance of multilocular adipocytes and increased expression levels of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), thermogenic and beige adipocyte-specific genes ( Cidea , Cd137 , and Tmem26 ), mitochondriogenesis markers (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-γ coactivator-1α, mitochondrial DNA copy number), nuclear respiratory factor 1, PPARα and their respective downstream lipid oxidation enzymes after l-arginine treatment. Such browning phenotype in the l-arginine-treated group was concordant with end-course decreases in leptinaemia, rpWAT mass, and body weight. In conclusion, l-arginine mimics cold-mediated increases in NO signaling in rpWAT and induces molecular and structural fingerprints of rpWAT browning. The results endorse l-arginine as a pharmaceutical alternative to cold exposure, which could be of great interest in obesity and associated metabolic diseases.
Keyphrases
- nitric oxide
- adipose tissue
- mitochondrial dna
- insulin resistance
- copy number
- high fat diet induced
- nitric oxide synthase
- hydrogen peroxide
- amino acid
- type diabetes
- body weight
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- weight loss
- high fat diet
- cardiovascular disease
- fatty acid
- gene expression
- poor prognosis
- transcription factor
- glycemic control
- high resolution
- body mass index
- single molecule
- small molecule
- newly diagnosed
- bioinformatics analysis
- smoking cessation