| Literature DB >> 27089991 |
Jueping Shi1, Xiaoyu Zhang1, Shaoying Wang1, Jinjin Wang2, Bing Du1, Zhugang Wang2, Mingyao Liu1, Wenzheng Jiang1, Min Qian1, Hua Ren1.
Abstract
Local inflammation in tissues is one of primary causes in development of metabolic disorder in obesity. The accumulation of macrophages in some tissues can induce inflammatory reactions in obesity. Gpr97 is highly expressed in some immunocytes, but its potential role in inflammatory regulation has not been revealed clearly. In our research, we investigated Gpr97 in regulating macrophage inflammation and metabolic dysfunction in the high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obese mice. The major metabolic phenotyping were not different after Gpr97 knockout in HFD-fed mice. Similar pathological alterations in adipose tissue, liver, and kidney were observed in Gpr97(-/-) HFD mice compared with WT-HFD mice. In white adipose tissue, loss of Gpr97 reduced the ratio of M1-macrophages and increased the M2-macrophage ratio, which was opposite to that seen in the wild-type HFD mice. More macrophages invaded in the liver and kidney after Gpr97 knockout in HFD mice. Furthermore, the levels of TNF-α were higher in the liver and kidney of Gpr97(-/-) HFD mice compared to those in wild-type HFD mice. The data indicate that Gpr97 might be required for local inflammation development in obesity-relative tissues, but does not play a role in metabolic disorder in HFD-induced obesity.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27089991 PMCID: PMC4835759 DOI: 10.1038/srep24649
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The obese phenotype and fasting blood glucose of high-fat diet (HFD)-induced mice.
(a) Food intake. The average grams food intake in WT and Gpr97−/− mice each month. (n = 8) (b) Body weight. The growth of body weight in WT and Gpr97−/− mice by chow or HFD feeding. (n = 6–8) (c) Intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test (ipGTT). The levels of blood glucose were detected at 0, 15, 30, 45 and 60 minutes after intraperitoneal inject in chow or HFD fed mice (n = 8). Data are shown as means ± s.e.m. **0.01 < P < 0.05, ***P < 0.01.
Figure 2Analysis of major metabolites in serum in mice.
(a) cholesterol, (b) glucose, (c) high-density lipoprotein (HDL), (d) low-density lipoprotein (LDL), (e) albumin, (f) carbamide, (g) creatinine, (h) triglyceride, (i) uric acid. Data are shown as means ± s.e.m. (n = 8). *P < 0.05, ** 0.01 < P < 0.05, ***P < 0.01.
Figure 3Detection of macrophages polarization in white adipose tissue (WAT) in HFD mice.
(a) Hematoxylin and eosin staining of WAT sections of WT and Gpr97−/− mice. Pictures were captured at 40× under optical microscope. (b) The expression of the relative factor associated with total macrophages F4/80 in mRNA levels in WAT. (c–f) The expression of relative factors in mRNA levels associated with M1-polarized macrophages in WAT. (g–k) The expression of relative factors associated with M2-polarized macrophages in WAT. Data are shown as means ± s.e.m. (n = 8). 0.01 < P < 0.05, ***P < 0.01.
Figure 4Microphotographs of the hepatic sections of control mice and Gpr97−/− mice.
(a) The Oil-red staining of liver sections of WT and Gpr97−/− mice. (b) The PAS staining of liver sections of WT and Gpr97−/− mice. The lung sections were observed at 10× magnification under optical microscope.
Figure 5Analysis of metabolite, transcriptional, inflammatory factors in mRNA levels in the livers of HFD-fed mice.
The expression of genes in mRNA levels which are associated with transcriptional regulators (a), mitochondrially encoded genes (b), fatty acid oxidation, hepatic mitochondrial function, lipogenesis, glucose metabolism (c) and inflammatory factors (d) in HFD mice. Data are shown as means ± s.e.m. (n = 8). *P < 0.05, ** 0.01 < P < 0.05.
Figure 6The HFD-induced inflammation analysis in kidney in the WT and Gpr97−/− mice.
(a) The morphological evaluation of kidney by PAS staining after HFD fed in mice. (b) Detecting of macrophage makers F4/80 in mRNA level to determine invasion of macrophage into kidney in HFD mice. (c–e) The expression of relative markers in mRNA levels associated with M1-polarized macrophages in kidney of HFD-fed mice. (f–j) The analysis of markers of M2-polarized macrophages in mRNA level in kidney of HFD-fed mice. Data are shown as means ± s.e.m. (n = 8). *P < 0.05.
Sequence-specific primers.
| Gene name | Primers (5′- 3′) | Size/bp |
|---|---|---|
| forkhead box O1(FoxO1) | SENSE: AAGGATAAGGGCGACAGCAA | 121 |
| ANTISENSE: TCCACCAAGAACTCTTTCCA | ||
| peroxisome proliferator activated receptor α (Pparα) | SENSE: CCTGAACATCGAGTGTCGAATAT | 322 |
| ANTISENSE: GGTTCTTCTTCTGAATCTTGCAGCT | ||
| PPARγ coactivator-1α (Pgc1α) | SENSE: AATGCAGCGGTCTTAGCACT | 131 |
| ANTISENSE: TTGTGGCTTTTGCTGTTGAC | ||
| PPARγ coactivator-1β (Pgc1β) | SENSE: GCCTCTCCAGGCAGGTTCA | 66 |
| ANTISENSE: TAGAGAACTCAGTCCAGAAGGCTTT | ||
| Estrogen-related receptor α (Errα) | SENSE: GCAGGGCAGTGGGAAGCTA | 127 |
| ANTISENSE: CCTCTTGAAGAAGGCTTTGCA | ||
| peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator-related 1 (Prc) | SENSE: CCATCCAGCCCGTCTAAGG | 81 |
| ANTISENSE: ATGAACGCCTGCACCACAT | ||
| ATP synthase subunit s (Atp5s) | SENSE: ATTGATGCCACCGATTCTTGTA | 61 |
| ANTISENSE: GCTCTAGGCCCACCATGTGA | ||
| ND1 | SENSE: CCCCTTCGACCTGACAGAAG | 69 |
| ANTISENSE: GGGCCGGCTGCGTATT | ||
| ND2 | SENSE: CAAGGGATCCCACTGCACAT | 90 |
| ANTISENSE: GAGTAGCGGGTAGATTTGGATTAAAA | ||
| ND4 | SENSE: ATCACTCCTATTCTGCCTAGCAAAC | 77 |
| ANTISENSE: GAAGTCCTCGGGCCATAATTATAGT | ||
| ATP6 | SENSE: AATTACAGGCTTCCGACACAAAC | 79 |
| ANTISENSE: TGGAATTAGTGAAATTGGAGTTCCT | ||
| ATP8 | SENSE: GCCACAACTAGATACATCAACATGATT | 130 |
| ANTISENSE: GGTTGTTAGTGATTTTGGTGAAGGT | ||
| Cyclooxygenase (COX2) | SENSE: CCTTCCTCCCGTAGCAG | 206 |
| ANTISENSE: ACCCAGGTCCTCGCTTA | ||
| peroxisomal acyl-coenzyme A oxidase 1 (Acox1) | SENSE: GCCCAACTGTGACTTCCATT | 113 |
| ANTISENSE: GGCATGTAACCCGTAGCACT | ||
| fibroblast growth factor 21 (Fgf21) | SENSE: CCTCTAGGTTTCTTTGCCAAC | 116 |
| ANTISENSE: CTGGTACACATTGTAACCGTC | ||
| Cs | SENSE: GGAGCCAAGAACTCATCCTG | 108 |
| ANTISENSE: TCTGGCCTGCTCCTTAGGTA | ||
| ATP synthase lipid-binding protein, mitochondrial (Atp5g1) | SENSE: GCTGCTTGAGAGATGGGTTC | 89 |
| ANTISENSE: AGTTGGTGTGGCTGGATCA | ||
| sterol response element binding protein-2 (SREBP2) | SENSE: CCCTTGACTTCCTTGCTGCA | 222 |
| ANTISENSE: GCGTGAGTGTGGGCGAATC | ||
| fatty acid synthase (Fasn) | SENSE: AGCTTCGGCTGCTGTTGGAAGT | 121 |
| ANTISENSE: TCGGATGCCTCTGAACCACTCACA | ||
| G6Pase | SENSE: CCGGATCTACCTTGCTGCTCACTTT | 172 |
| ANTISENSE: TAGCAGGTAGAATCCAAGCGCGAAAC | ||
| phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) | SENSE: CCACAGCTGCTGCAGAACA | 65 |
| ANTISENSE: GAAGGGTCGCATGGCAAA | ||
| F4/80 | SENSE:TGACTCACCTTGTGGTCCTAA | 111 |
| ANTISENSE: CTTCCCAGAATCCAGTCTTTCC | ||
| TNF-α | SENSE:TCCCTTTCACTCACTGGC | 353 |
| ANTISENSE: ACTTGGTGGTTTGCTACG | ||
| IL-6 | SENSE:TTCTTGGGACTGATGCTG | 379 |
| ANTISENSE: CTGGCTTTGTCTTTCTTGTT | ||
| IL-1β | SENSE:GCCTCAAAGGAAAGAATC | 298 |
| ANTISENSE: GAAACAGTCCAGCCCATAC | ||
| CD86 | SENSE:AGCAAGGTCACCCGAAAC | 300 |
| ANTISENSE:GCAGCATCACAAGGAGGAG | ||
| CD68 | SENSE:GGACCCACAACTGTCACTCAT | 286 |
| ANTISENSE: AAGCCCCACTTTAGCTTTACC | ||
| CD163 | SENSE:GGCTAGACGAAGTCATCTGCAC | 144 |
| ANTISENSE: CTTCGTTGGTCAGCCTCAGAGA | ||
| CD206 | SENSE:CTCTGTTCAGCTATTGGACGC | 132 |
| ANTISENSE: CGGAATTTCTGGGATTCAGCTTC | ||
| Arg1 | SENSE:CTCCAAGCCAAAGTCCTTAGAG | 185 |
| ANTISENSE: AGGAGCTGTCATTAGGGACATC | ||
| IL-10 | SENSE:ATGCTGCCTGCTCTTACTGACTG | 216 |
| ANTISENSE: CCCAAGTAACCCTTAAAGTCCTGC | ||
| β-actin | SENSE:GTACGCCAACACAGTGCTG | 212 |
| ANTISENSE: CGTCATACTCCTGCTTGCTG |