| Literature DB >> 24307898 |
Maria S Fernández-Alfonso1, Marta Gil-Ortega, Concha F García-Prieto, Isabel Aranguez, Mariano Ruiz-Gayo, Beatriz Somoza.
Abstract
Most blood vessels are surrounded by adipose tissue. Similarly to the adventitia, perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) was considered only as a passive structural support for the vasculature, and it was routinely removed for isolated blood vessel studies. In 1991, Soltis and Cassis demonstrated for the first time that PVAT reduced contractions to noradrenaline in rat aorta. Since then, an important number of adipocyte-derived factors with physiological and pathophysiological paracrine vasoactive effects have been identified. PVAT undergoes structural and functional changes in obesity. During early diet-induced obesity, an adaptative overproduction of vasodilator factors occurs in PVAT, probably aimed at protecting vascular function. However, in established obesity, PVAT loses its anticontractile properties by an increase of contractile, oxidative, and inflammatory factors, leading to endothelial dysfunction and vascular disease. The aim of this review is to focus on PVAT dysfunction mechanisms in obesity.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24307898 PMCID: PMC3838835 DOI: 10.1155/2013/402053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-8337 Impact factor: 3.257
Mechanisms of PVAT dysfunction.
| (i) Increase in adipocyte size and PVAT amount | |
| (ii) Hypoxia | |
| (iii) Aging | |
| (iv) Leptin/adiponectin dysregulation | |
| (v) Loss of anticontractile properties | |
| (vi) Loss of eNOS and NO | |
| (vii) Increase in oxidative stress | |
| (viii) Increase in inflammatory response |
Loss of anticontractile effect of PVAT in obesity.
| Study reference | Vessel | Type of PVAT | Species | Obesity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Small arteries (100–150 | Subcutaneous gluteal | Human | Obese patients |
| [ | Mesenteric arteries | Mesenteric | C57BL6 mice | DIO (32 w) |
| [ | Mesenteric arteries | Mesenteric | NZO mice | |
| [ | Mesenteric arteries | NZO mice | ||
| [ | Mesenteric arteries | Mesenteric | Rat | DIO (6 mo) |
| [ | Aorta | Periaortic | Rat | DIO (6 mo) |
| [ | Aorta | Periaortic | Rat | Perinatal nicotine adm |
| [ | Coronary | Epicardial | Ossabaw obese swine | DIO (20 w) |
| [ | Coronary | Epicardial | Ossabaw obese swine | DIO (6–12 mo) |
Figure 1Leptin stimulates nitric oxide (NO) release in perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT). Mice lacking leptin (ob/ob) do not exhibit NO production in perivascular adipocytes. NO release is restored in PVAT after 2-week subcutaneous leptin infusion. Data from [17].
Increase in PVAT amount and adipocyte size in different models of obesity.
| Species | Model | PVAT | Adipocyte size | Study reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wistar rat | HFD (6 mo) | Aortic | Increase | [ |
| Wistar Kyoto rat | HFD (3 mo—60% cal from fat) | Aortic | Increase | [ |
| Zucker fa/fa rat | Aortic | Increase | [ | |
| C57Bl6 mice | HFD (2 w—42% cal from fat) | Aortic | Increase | [ |
| C57Bl6 mice | HFD (13–20 w—45% cal from fat) | Thoracic aortic | No change | [ |
| C57Bl6 mice | HFD (8 w—45% cal from fat) | Mesenteric | Increase | [ |
| C57Bl6 mice | HFD (32 w—45% cal from fat) | Mesenteric | Increase | [ |
HFD: high fat diet; mo: month; w: weeks.
Figure 2Hypothesis of the role of PVAT and PVAT-derived adipokines in health and obesity.