4.7 Article

Consequences of Lipid Remodeling of Adipocyte Membranes Being Functionally Distinct from Lipid Storage in Obesity

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 19, Issue 10, Pages 3919-3935

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.9b00894

Keywords

white adipose tissue; one-carbon metabolism; DNA methylation; phosphatidylcholine; lipidomics; mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council UK [MC_UP_A090_1006, MC_PC_13030, MR/P011705/1, MR/P01836X/1]
  2. Agilent Corporation
  3. Diabetes UK RD Lawrence Fellowship [16/0005382]
  4. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/R013500/1]
  5. Medical Research Council [MR/R 014086/1]
  6. British Heart Foundation
  7. GlaxoSmithKline
  8. AstraZeneca
  9. BBSRC [BB/R013500/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  10. MRC [MR/P01836X/1, MC_UP_A090_1006, MC_PC_13030, MR/P011705/2, MR/P011705/1, MR/R014086/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Obesity is a complex disorder where the genome interacts with diet and environmental factors to ultimately influence body mass, composition, and shape. Numerous studies have investigated how bulk lipid metabolism of adipose tissue changes with obesity and, in particular, how the composition of triglycerides (TGs) changes with increased adipocyte expansion. However, reflecting the analytical challenge posed by examining non-TG lipids in extracts dominated by TGs, the glycerophospholipid composition of cell membranes has been seldom investigated. Phospholipids (PLs) contribute to a variety of cellular processes including maintaining organelle functionality, providing an optimized environment for membrane-associated proteins, and acting as pools for metabolites (e.g. choline for one-carbon metabolism and for methylation of DNA). We have conducted a comprehensive lipidomic study of white adipose tissue in mice which become obese either through genetic modification (ob/ob), diet (high fat diet), or a combination of the two, using both solid phase extraction and ion mobility to increase coverage of the lipidome. Composition changes in seven classes of lipids (free fatty acids, diglycerides, TGs, phosphatidylcholines, lyso-phosphatidylcholines, phosphatidylethanolamines, and phosphatidylserines) correlated with perturbations in one-carbon metabolism and transcriptional changes in adipose tissue. We demonstrate that changes in TGs that dominate the overall lipid composition of white adipose tissue are distinct from diet-induced alterations of PLs, the predominant components of the cell membranes. PLs correlate better with transcriptional and one-carbon metabolism changes within the cell, suggesting that the compositional changes that occur in cell membranes during adipocyte expansion have far-reaching functional consequences. Data are available at MetaboLights under the submission number: MTBLS1775.

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