4.6 Article

Study of the Proinflammatory Role of Human Differentiated Omental Adipocytes

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 107, Issue 6, Pages 1107-1117

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcb.22208

Keywords

ADIPOCYTOKINES; INFLAMMATION; OBESITY; OMENTAL ADIPOCYTES; MAPK

Funding

  1. Biomedical Research Institute of Girona (Hospital de Girona, Or Josep Trucial
  2. Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia [SAF2008-02373, SAF2006-02354]
  3. CIBER Fisiopatologia de la Obesidad y Nutricion [CB06/03/010]

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Infiltration of monocyte-derived macrophages into adipose tissue has been associated with tissue and systemic inflammation. It has been suggested that macrophage infiltration affects fat expansion through a paracrine action on adipocyte differentiation. Our working hypothesis is that factors released by monocytes/macrophages may also affect mature adipocyte biology. Human differentiated omental adipocytes were incubated with LPS and conditioned media obtained from human macrophage-like cell line THP-1, previously activated or not with LPS. We show that LPS greatly increased the secretion levels of pro-inflammatory adipokines including IL-6, IL-8, GRO, and MCP-1. Macrophage-conditioned medium also upregulated IL-6, IL-8, GRO, and MCP-1 mRNA expression and protein levels and led to the novo secretion of ICAM-1, IL-1 beta, IP-10, MIP-1 alpha, MIP-1 beta, VEGF, and TNF alpha. Human differentiated adipocytes treated by macrophage-conditioned medium displayed marked reduction of adipocyte function as assessed by decreased phosphorylation levels of ERK1, ERK2, and p38 alpha and reduced gene expression of lipogenic markers including PPAR-gamma and fatty acid synthase. These data show that macrophage-secreted factors not only inhibit the formation of mature adipocytes but alter their function, suggesting that human differentiated omental adipocytes might also contribute to systemic chronic low-grade inflammation associated with human obesity. J. Cell. Biochem. 107: 1107-1117, 2009. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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