4.8 Article

PTEN Loss in the Myf5 Lineage Redistributes Body Fat and Reveals Subsets of White Adipocytes that Arise from Myf5 Precursors

Journal

CELL METABOLISM
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages 348-362

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2012.08.003

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R00CA129613, R21CA161121]
  2. Pew Charitable Trusts
  3. Charles Hood Foundation
  4. Beatriu de Pinos program from the Generalitat de Catalunya

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The developmental origin of adipose tissue and what controls its distribution is poorly understood. By lineage tracing and gene expression analysis in mice, we provide evidence that mesenchymal precursors expressing Myf5-which are thought to give rise only to brown adipocytes and skeletal muscle-also give rise to a subset of white adipocytes. Furthermore, individual brown and white fats contain a mixture of adipocyte progenitor cells derived from Myf5(+) and Myf5(neg) lineages, the number of which varies with depot location. Subsets of white adipocytes originating from both Myf5(+) and Myf5(neg) precursors respond to beta(3)-adrenoreceptor stimulation, suggesting brite adipocytes may also have multiple origins. We additionally find that deleting PTEN with myf5-cre causes lipomatosis and partial lipodystrophy by selectively expanding the Myf5(+) adipocyte lineages. Thus, the spectrum of adipocytes arising from Myf5(+) precursors is broader than previously thought, and differences in PI3K activity between adipocyte lineages alter body fat distribution.

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