4.7 Article

Obesity Alters Adipose Tissue Macrophage Iron Content and Tissue Iron Distribution

Journal

DIABETES
Volume 63, Issue 2, Pages 421-432

Publisher

AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db13-0213

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Discovery Grant in Innovative Diabetes Research from the Vanderbilt Diabetes Center [DK-20593]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R21 DK-095456]
  3. NIH Ruth L. Kirschstein NRSA [F32 DK-091040]
  4. American Diabetes Association Mentor-based Postdoctoral Fellowship [7-10-MI-05]
  5. American Heart Association Pre-doctoral Fellowship [12PRE11910047]
  6. NIH [DK-20593, R21 DK-095456, DK-058404, CA-68485, DK-58404, HD-15052, DK-59637, EY-08126]
  7. American Heart Association Established Investigator Award [12EIA8270000]
  8. NIH Shared Instrumentation grant [S10 RR-026742]
  9. [DK-059637]

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Adipose tissue (AT) expansion is accompanied by the infiltration and accumulation of AT macrophages (ATMs), as well as a shift in ATM polarization. Several studies have implicated recruited M1 ATMs in the metabolic consequences of obesity; however, little is known regarding the role of alternatively activated resident M2 ATMs in AT homeostasis or how their function is altered in obesity. Herein, we report the discovery of a population of alternatively activated ATMs with elevated cellular iron content and an iron-recycling gene expression profile. These iron-rich ATMs are referred to as MFehi, and the remaining ATMs are referred to as MFelo. In lean mice, similar to 25% of the ATMs are MFehi; this percentage decreases in obesity owing to the recruitment of MFelo macrophages. Similar to MFelo cells, MFehi ATMs undergo an inflammatory shift in obesity. In vivo, obesity reduces the iron content of MFehi ATMs and the gene expression of iron importers as well as the iron exporter, ferroportin, suggesting an impaired ability to handle iron. In vitro, exposure of primary peritoneal macrophages to saturated fatty acids also alters iron metabolism gene expression. Finally, the impaired MFehi iron handling coincides with adipocyte iron overload in obese mice. In conclusion, in obesity, iron distribution is altered both at the cellular and tissue levels, with AT playing a predominant role in this change. An increased availability of fatty acids during obesity may contribute to the observed changes in MFehi ATM phenotype and their reduced capacity to handle iron.

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