Login / Signup

Pink adipose tissue: A paradigm of adipose tissue plasticity.

Bruno FèveSaverio CintidCarine BeaupèreCamille VatierCorinne VigourouxAnna ValiJacqueline CapeauAlexandra GrosfedMarthe Moldes
Published in: Annales d'endocrinologie (2024)
Adipose tissue is highly plastic, as illustrated mainly by the transdifferentiation of white adipocytes into beige adipocytes, depending on environmental conditions. However, during gestation and lactation in rodent, there is an amazing phenomenon of transformation of subcutaneous adipose tissue into mammary glandular tissue, known as pink adipose tissue, capable of synthesizing and secreting milk. Recent work using transgenic lineage-tracing experiments, mainly carried out in Saverio Cinti's team, has demonstrated very convincingly that this process does indeed correspond to a transdifferentiation of white adipocytes into mammary alveolar cells (pink adipocytes) during gestation and lactation. This phenomenon is reversible, since during the post-lactation phase, pink adipocytes revert to the white adipocyte phenotype. The molecular mechanisms underlying this reversible transdifferentiation remain poorly understood.
Keyphrases
  • adipose tissue
  • insulin resistance
  • high fat diet
  • human milk
  • dairy cows
  • preterm infants
  • induced apoptosis
  • oxidative stress
  • type diabetes
  • cell cycle arrest
  • gestational age
  • climate change