4.7 Review

The Sick Adipose Tissue: New Insights Into Defective Signaling and Crosstalk With the Myocardium

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.735070

Keywords

adipose tissue; myocardiocytes; microbiota; obesity; inflammation

Funding

  1. Consejo de Desarrollo Cientifico, Humanistico y Tecnologico (CONDES) [CC-0437-10-21-09-10]
  2. University of Zulia
  3. Fundacite-Zulia [FZ-0058-2007]

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This article discusses the pathophysiology and consequences of adipose tissue expansion, particularly its association with meta-inflammation and microbiota dysbiosis. It also explores the mechanisms involved in metabolic reprogramming in AT, which may be causative factors for cardiovascular disease. Finally, it clarifies how lifestyle changes can improve myocardial cell function and develop effective non-pharmacologic approaches to combating CVD through changes in AT proteomics and gut microbiome.
Adipose tissue (AT) biology is linked to cardiovascular health since obesity is associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) and positively correlated with excessive visceral fat accumulation. AT signaling to myocardial cells through soluble factors known as adipokines, cardiokines, branched-chain amino acids and small molecules like microRNAs, undoubtedly influence myocardial cells and AT function via the endocrine-paracrine mechanisms of action. Unfortunately, abnormal total and visceral adiposity can alter this harmonious signaling network, resulting in tissue hypoxia and monocyte/macrophage adipose infiltration occurring alongside expanded intra-abdominal and epicardial fat depots seen in the human obese phenotype. These processes promote an abnormal adipocyte proteomic reprogramming, whereby these cells become a source of abnormal signals, affecting vascular and myocardial tissues, leading to meta-inflammation, atrial fibrillation, coronary artery disease, heart hypertrophy, heart failure and myocardial infarction. This review first discusses the pathophysiology and consequences of adipose tissue expansion, particularly their association with meta-inflammation and microbiota dysbiosis. We also explore the precise mechanisms involved in metabolic reprogramming in AT that represent plausible causative factors for CVD. Finally, we clarify how lifestyle changes could promote improvement in myocardiocyte function in the context of changes in AT proteomics and a better gut microbiome profile to develop effective, non-pharmacologic approaches to CVD.

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