Involution of brown adipose tissue through a Syntaxin 4 dependent pyroptosis pathway.
Xiaofan YuGabrielle BenitezPeter Tszki WeiSofia V KrylovaZiyi SongLi LiuMeifan ZhangAlus M XiaoliHenna WeiFenfen ChenSimone SidoliFajun YangKosaku ShinodaJeffrey E PessinDaorong FengPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Aging, chronic high-fat diet feeding, or housing at thermoneutrality induces brown adipose tissue (BAT) involution, a process characterized by reduction of BAT mass and function with increased lipid droplet size. Single nuclei RNA sequencing of aged mice identifies a specific brown adipocyte population of Ucp1-low cells that are pyroptotic and display a reduction in the longevity gene syntaxin 4 (Stx4a). Similar to aged brown adipocytes, Ucp1-STX4KO mice display loss of brown adipose tissue mass and thermogenic dysfunction concomitant with increased pyroptosis. Restoration of STX4 expression or suppression of pyroptosis activation protects against the decline in both mass and thermogenic activity in the aged and Ucp1-STX4KO mice. Mechanistically, STX4 deficiency reduces oxidative phosphorylation, glucose uptake, and glycolysis leading to reduced ATP levels, a known triggering signal for pyroptosis. Together, these data demonstrate an understanding of rapid brown adipocyte involution and that physiologic aging and thermogenic dysfunction result from pyroptotic signaling activation.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- high fat diet
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- nlrp inflammasome
- single cell
- oxidative stress
- genome wide
- poor prognosis
- induced apoptosis
- metabolic syndrome
- gene expression
- skeletal muscle
- big data
- wild type
- signaling pathway
- blood pressure
- fatty acid
- machine learning
- high throughput
- artificial intelligence
- cell proliferation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress