| Literature DB >> 27039901 |
Vanessa Pellegrinelli1, Stefania Carobbio2,3, Antonio Vidal-Puig4,5.
Abstract
White adipose tissue (WAT) has key metabolic and endocrine functions and plays a role in regulating energy homeostasis and insulin sensitivity. WAT is characterised by its capacity to adapt and expand in response to surplus energy through processes of adipocyte hypertrophy and/or recruitment and proliferation of precursor cells in combination with vascular and extracellular matrix remodelling. However, in the context of sustained obesity, WAT undergoes fibro-inflammation, which compromises its functionality, contributing to increased risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Conversely, brown adipose tissue (BAT) and browning of WAT represent potential therapeutic approaches, since dysfunctional white adipocyte-induced lipid overspill can be halted by BAT/browning-mediated oxidative anti-lipotoxic effects. Better understanding of the cellular and molecular pathophysiological mechanisms regulating adipocyte size, number and depot-dependent expansion has become a focus of interest over recent decades. Here, we summarise the mechanisms contributing to adipose tissue (AT) plasticity and function including characteristics and cellular complexity of the various adipose depots and we discuss recent insights into AT origins, identification of adipose precursors, pathophysiological regulation of adipogenesis and its relation to WAT/BAT expandability in obesity and its associated comorbidities.Entities:
Keywords: Adipogenesis; Adipose tissue; Development; Fibrosis; Inflammation; Obesity; Plasticity; Review; Tissue remodelling; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27039901 PMCID: PMC4861754 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-016-3933-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Structural and cellular variables involved in AT remodelling: comparison between VAT, SAT and BAT
| Variable | SAT vs VAT | BAT vs WAT |
|---|---|---|
| Adipogenic potential | ||
| Adipogenic genes | Higher expression of | Lower differentiation potential [ |
| Anti-adipogenic genes | Lower expression of | Higher |
| MSC markers | Lower expression of | Lower plasticity, mesenchymal stem cells [ |
| Vascularisation | ||
| Total vascular density | Lower compared with oVAT (obese) [ | Higher [ |
| Capillary density | Higher than oVAT of (obese) [ | Greater [ |
| Vascular sprouting | Greater [ | NA |
| Innervation | ||
| Neurogenic factors | Lower mRNA expression of | Lower mRNA expression of |
| Nervous network | NA | Greater number of noradrenergic parenchymal nerve fibres [ |
| Cellularity | ||
| Immune cells | Higher CD68+ cells (obese adolescent) [ | Lower haematopoietic population (CD45+) [ |
| SVF (except APs) | Higher [ | Lower F4/80-, CD68- and CD11b+ cells compared with iSAT/eVAT (lean/obese) [ |
| Adipocyte death/CLS | Lower [ | NA |
| ECM | ||
| Tissue expression | Greater protein expression of type 1 collagen but lower level of laminin (b/c) and fibronectin (lean) [ | NA |
| Higher | ||
| Secretion | Higher secretion of THSB1/2, type 1 collagen, SPARC, TIMP1. Lower secretion of laminin, type 6 collagen and TGFβ1 [ | NA |
Comparative studies below were performed in WAT/BAT tissues from lean and/or obese rodents and humans or isolated SVF cells from various depots: SAT (inguinal, iSAT in rodents) and VAT (gonadal [gVAT], epididymal [eVAT] in rodents; omental [oVAT] in humans)
aRodents
bHumans
cWAT/BAT tissues
dIsolated SVF cells
CLS, crown-like structure; NA, not available; SPARC, secreted protein acidic and cysteine rich; THSB1/2 thrombospondin-1/-2; TIMP1, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1
Fig. 1BAT/WAT adipogenesis and associated tissue remodelling. (a) Adipogenesis consists of a two-step process involving, successively, mesenchymal precursors, committed pre-adipocytes, growth-arrested pre-adipocytes, mitotic clonal expansion, terminal differentiation and mature adipocytes. The first step of white adipocyte differentiation is the generation of pre-adipocytes from mesenchymal precursors (MSCs) MYF5− (grey arrow) or MYF5+ (brown arrows), driven by BMP4. By promoting dissociation of the WISP2–ZNF423 complex, BMP4 allows nuclear entry of ZNF423 and PPARγ induction. Repression of ZNF521, which negatively regulates ZNF423 by repressing EBF1, also constitutes an early event in induction of white adipogenesis. The second step of adipogenesis is the differentiation of pre-adipocytes into mature adipocytes (green arrow), a process that involves the activation of transcription factors C/EBPβ and C/EBPδ, first during mitotic clonal expansion of pre-adipocytes and subsequently induction of C/EBPα and PPARγ2, which maintains the terminal differentiation of the adipocyte. Finally, SREBP1 is considered to be the third key transcription factor for adipogenesis, inducing expression of adipocyte-specific genes such as FABP4, adiponectin, GLUT4 (also known as SLC2A4), and LPL. C/EBPζ, a dominant inhibitor of C/EBPα and β, is induced in late adipocyte differentiation and has been proposed as an inhibitor of adipogenesis. Both canonical and non-canonical Wnt signalling pathways negatively regulate adipogenesis. β-Catenin mediates canonical Wnt signalling by activating cyclin D1, conversely with inhibition of PPARγ and C/EBPα, causing a further decrease in adipogenesis. Similar to WAT, commitment of brown pre-adipocytes from MYF5+ MSCs (brown arrows) and differentiation into brown adipocytes (orange arrow) involves transcriptional control by C/EBPs and PPARγ2 while some transcription factors, such as FOXC2, PGC1α and PDRM16, are specific to brown cell fate leading to brown-specific thermogenic markers such as UCP-1. Recent evidence suggests that both brown and white adipocytes may derive from endothelial precursors (red arrows). (b) Angiogenesis is driven by angiogenic factors produced by adipocytes and vascular cells. VEGF-A is considered the main pro-angiogenic factor of AT. VEGF-A binds to VEGF receptors 1 and 2 to drive the migration of so-called ‘tip cells’, the ECs at the tip of a new capillary. Other growth factors such as ANGPTL4 and FGF-2 drive the migration and proliferation of stalk cells, the endothelial cells between the tip cells and the existing vessel that drive elongation. The new vessel is stabilised by the production of ECM components, forming the basement membrane, and the recruitment of pericytes. (c) Pre-adipocytes are surrounded by a fibrous ECM enriched in collagen I, collagen III and fibronectin replaced by the basement membrane, a specialised ECM surrounding mature adipocytes composed of collagen IV, collagen XVIII, entactin and laminin. ECM remodelling during adipogenesis involves degradation of pre-adipocyte ECM by proteases (MMPs, ADAMT and cathepsins). This liberates growth factors and matricellular proteins that are important for the synthesis of the new mature adipocyte basement membrane. ADAMT, a disintegrin and MMP with thrombospondin motifs; ANGPTL4, angiopoietin-like 4; EBF1, early B-cell factor 1; LPL, lipoprotein lipase
Fig. 2SAT and VAT pathological remodelling in obesity and potential strategies. (a) WAT undergoes cellular and structural remodelling in obesity, characterised by the following: (1) adipocyte hypertrophy associated with production of inflammatory factors (VAT > SAT); (2) accumulation of immune cells such as macrophages organised around dead adipocytes (VAT > SAT); (3) decreased capillary density associated with EC dysfunction (i.e. activation, inflammation and senescence) (VAT > SAT); (4) activation of fibroblasts and APs (SAT > VAT) leading to fibrosis deposition and decreased tissue plasticity (SAT > VAT). (b) Differential strategies between WAT and BAT depots to prevent obesity-related disorders, targeting tissue plasticity/remodelling and response to sympathetic tone, to promote healthy SAT expansion and browning, conversely with limited VAT expansion and lipotoxic action, and BAT activation and recruitment of APs
| SAT and BAT adipogenesis occurs during embryogenesis while VAT adipocytes preferentially differentiate postnatally. While BAT originates from paraxial mesoderm, WAT can have mesodermal and NC origins. White/brown adipogenesis can be reinitiated in adults in response to positive energy balance by differentiation of APs located within the vasculature. Whether the origin of a third class of adipocytes, ‘beige/brite’ adipocytes, is the result of white adipocyte trans-differentiation or differentiation of specific precursors is still a matter of debate |
| Adipogenesis and subsequent AT expansion require appropriate plasticity ensured by efficient remodelling of vasculature and ECM, both processes orchestrated by angiogenic/growth factors and ECM proteases. These processes are also influenced by the anatomical localisation and differentiation capacity of the precursor pools of the different AT depots |
| Hypertrophy preferentially occurs in VAT, while hyperplasia is more characteristic of SAT expansion due to higher progenitor number and/or activity in both human and rodents. However, in chronic states of obesity it is common that SAT adipogenesis is impaired while VAT still expands and contributes to metabolic alterations. Although still controversial, some studies have reported the contribution of haematopoietic precursors to newly formed adipocytes in obesity |
| Adipogenesis is impaired in obesity as a result of a chronic fibro-inflammatory environment where the increase of cytokines and ECM proteins disrupts AP differentiation and promotes activation of fibrotic signalling. In addition, fibrosis mechanically limits tissue plasticity, contributing to metabolic alterations |