4.6 Article

Visceral White Adipose Tissue after Chronic Intermittent and Sustained Hypoxia in Mice

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2016-0243OC

Keywords

adipose tissue; hypoxia-inducible factor; insulin resistance; inflammation; angiogensis

Funding

  1. Generalitat de Catalunya/Marie Curie Actions [2010 BP-A2 00023]
  2. Herbert T. Abelson Chair in Pediatrics

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Angiogenesis, a process induced by hypoxia in visceral white adipose tissues (vWAT) in the context of obesity, mediates obesity-induced metabolic dysfunction and insulin resistance. Chronic intermittent hypoxia (IH) and sustained hypoxia (SH) induce body weight reductions and insulin resistance of different magnitudes, suggesting different hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1 alpha-related activity. Eight-week-old male C57BL/6J mice (n = 10-12/group) were exposed to either IH, SH, or room air (RA). vWAT were analyzed for insulin sensitivity (phosphorylated (pAKT)/AKT), HIF-1 alpha transcription using chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-sequencing, angiogenesis using immunohistochemistry, and gene expression of different fat cell markers and HIF-1 alpha gene targets using quantitative polymerase chain reaction or microarrays. Body and vWAT weights were reduced in hypoxia (SH > IH > RA; P < 0.001), with vWAT in IH manifesting vascular rarefaction and increased proinflammatory macrophages. HIF-1 alpha ChIP-sequencing showed markedly increased binding sites in SH-exposed vWAT both at 6 hours and at 6 weeks compared with IH, the latter also showing decreased vascular endothelial growth factor, endothelial nitric oxide synthase, P2RX5, and PAT2 expression, and insulin resistance (IH > > > SH = RA; P < 0.001). IH induces preferential whitening of vWAT, as opposed to prominent browning in SH. Unlike SH, IH elicits early HIF-1 alpha activity that is unsustained over time and is accompanied by concurrent vascular rarefaction, inflammation, and insulin resistance. Thus, the dichotomous changes in HIF-1 alpha transcriptional activity and brown/beige/white fat balance in IH and SH should enable exploration of mechanisms by which altered sympathetic outflow, such as that which occurs in apneic patients, results in whitening, rather than the anticipated browning of adipose tissues that occurs in SH.

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