Reduced secretion of neuronal growth regulator 1 contributes to impaired adipose-neuronal crosstalk in obesity.
Elisa DuregottiChristina M ReumillerUrsula MayrMaria HasmanLukas Emanuel SchmidtSean A BurnapKonstantinos TheofilatosJavier Barallobre-BarreiroArne BeranMaria GrandochAlessandro VivianoMarjan JahangiriManuel MayrPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
While the endocrine function of white adipose tissue has been extensively explored, comparatively little is known about the secretory activity of less-investigated fat depots. Here, we use proteomics to compare the secretory profiles of male murine perivascular depots with those of canonical white and brown fat. Perivascular secretomes show enrichment for neuronal cell-adhesion molecules, reflecting a higher content of intra-parenchymal sympathetic projections compared to other adipose depots. The sympathetic innervation is reduced in the perivascular fat of obese (ob/ob) male mice, as well as in the epicardial fat of patients with obesity. Degeneration of sympathetic neurites is observed in presence of conditioned media of fat explants from ob/ob mice, that show reduced secretion of neuronal growth regulator 1. Supplementation of neuronal growth regulator 1 reverses this neurodegenerative effect, unveiling a neurotrophic role for this protein previously identified as a locus associated with human obesity. As sympathetic stimulation triggers energy-consuming processes in adipose tissue, an impaired adipose-neuronal crosstalk is likely to contribute to the disrupted metabolic homeostasis characterising obesity.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- high fat diet
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- cerebral ischemia
- type diabetes
- transcription factor
- weight gain
- endothelial cells
- cell adhesion
- mass spectrometry
- skeletal muscle
- fatty acid
- physical activity
- body mass index
- amino acid
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- binding protein
- genome wide association study