| Literature DB >> 27549402 |
Anne Drougard1,2, Audren Fournel1,2, Alysson Marlin1,2, Etienne Meunier3, Anne Abot1,2, Tereza Bautzova1,2, Thibaut Duparc1,2, Katie Louche1, Aurelie Batut1, Alexandre Lucas1, Sophie Le-Gonidec1, Jean Lesage4, Xavier Fioramonti5, Cedric Moro1, Philippe Valet1,2, Patrice D Cani2,6,7, Claude Knauf1,2.
Abstract
Apelin is a bioactive peptide involved in the control of energy metabolism. In the hypothalamus, chronic exposure to high levels of apelin is associated with an increase in hepatic glucose production, and then contributes to the onset of type 2 diabetes. However, the molecular mechanisms behind deleterious effects of chronic apelin in the brain and consequences on energy expenditure and thermogenesis are currently unknown. We aimed to evaluate the effects of chronic intracerebroventricular (icv) infusion of apelin in normal mice on hypothalamic inflammatory gene expression, energy expenditure, thermogenesis and brown adipose tissue functions. We have shown that chronic icv infusion of apelin increases the expression of pro-inflammatory factors in the hypothalamus associated with an increase in plasma interleukin-1 beta. In parallel, mice infused with icv apelin exhibit a significant lower energy expenditure coupled to a decrease in PGC1alpha, PRDM16 and UCP1 expression in brown adipose tissue which could explain the alteration of thermogenesis in these mice. These data provide compelling evidence that central apelin contributes to the development of type 2 diabetes by altering energy expenditure, thermogenesis and fat browning.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27549402 PMCID: PMC4994119 DOI: 10.1038/srep31849
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Chronic icv apelin increases the expression of hypothalamic and plasma pro-inflammatory markers.
Effect of chronic apelin treatment (Apelin) versus chronic aCSF treatment (Control) on hypothalamic (a) Il1beta (b) Tnfalpha and on (c) Inos mRNA expression. Effect of chronic apelin treatment (Apelin) versus chronic aCSF treatment (Control) on IL1beta (d), TNFalpha (e) and iNOS (f) hypothalamic levels. Effect of chronic apelin treatment (Apelin) versus chronic aCSF treatment (Control) on IL1beta (g), TNFalpha (h) and iNOS (i) plasma levels. Experiments were performed with a set of 5–7 9 mice in each group. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01. N.D: Not Determined.
Figure 2Apelin depolarizes POMC neurons in the hypothalamus without effect on food intake and tissue weight.
Effect of chronic apelin treatment (Apelin) versus chronic aCSF treatment (Control) (a) on tissues weight (SC: subcutaneous adipose tissue, PG: perigonadal adipose tissue, Mes: mesenteric adipose tissue, BAT: brown adipose tissue, VL: vastus lateralis (muscle); HL: muscle; EDL: extensor digitorum longus (muscle)); (b) on triglycerides (TG) and free fatty acids (FFA) plasma levels; (c) on hypothalamic Npy mRNA expression and; (d) on hypothalamic Pomc mRNA expression. (e) (Left panel) Representative cell-attached recording of a POMC-GFP neuron activated by apelin (thick black bar under the trace). Panels below the trace represent enlarged 60 seconds recording periods with average action potential frequency before, during and after apelin bath application. (Right panel) Quantification of action potential (AP) frequency of POMC before (control; over the last 60 s before apelin application), during (apelin, over the last 60 seconds of apelin application) and after (reversal, over 60 seconds, 5 minutes after apelin application) apelin application. Experiments were performed with a set of 6–9 mice in each group. **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05 vs. control.
Figure 3Chronic icv apelin does not modulate ambulatory activity.
Effect of chronic apelin treatment (Apelin) versus chronic aCSF treatment (Control) (a) on global ambulatory activity; (b) on ambulatory activity during the light period; (c) on ambulatory activity during the dark period. Experiments were performed with a set of 5–6 mice in each group.
Figure 4Chronic icv apelin decreases energy expenditure.
Effect of chronic apelin treatment (Apelin) versus chronic aCSF treatment (Control) (a) on energy expenditure with a focus during dark and light period; (b) on VO2 with a focus during dark and light period; (c) on VCO2 with a focus during dark and light period and; (d) on Respiratory Quotient (RQ) with a focus during dark and light period. Experiments were performed with a set of 5–6 mice in each group. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.
Figure 5Chronic icv apelin mice present an alteration of thermogenesis.
Effects of chronic apelin treatment (Apelin) versus chronic aCSF treatment (Control) (a) on BAT Pgc1alpha mRNA expression; (b) on BAT Prdm16 mRNA expression; (c) on BAT UCP1 protein level; (d) on body temperature at room temperature and; (e) on body temperature at 4 °C. Experiments were performed with a set of 4–7 mice in each group. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.
Sequence of the oligonucleotide primer sets used in RT-PCR analysis.
| Target genes | Primer sequence 5′ to 3′ | |
|---|---|---|
| Sense | Antisense | |
| Beta2microglobulin | CACTGACCGGCCTGTATGC | GGGTGGCGTGAGTATACTTGAATT |
| Cd36 | GGACATACTTAGATGTGGAACCCATA | TGTTGACCTGCAGTCGTTTTG |
| Fabp4 | TGTGGGAACCTGGAAGCTTGTC | TCTGACCGGATGGTGACCAAA |
| Fatp1 | GACAAGCTGGATCAGGCAAGC | AGTGAGGCCACAGAGGCTGTT |
| Fiaf | CAATGCCAAATTGCTCCAATT | TGGCCGTGGGCTCAGT |
| Glut1 | GGTGTGCAGCAGCCTGTGT | CACAGTGAAGGCCGTGTTGA |
| Glut4 | CCGGATTCCATCCCACAAG | CATGCCACCCACAGAGAAGA |
| G6pase | ACGTATGGATTCCGGTGTTTG | CAGCTGCACAGCCCAGAA |
| Inos | CACCTTGGACTTCACCCAGT | ACCACTCGTACTTGGGATGT |
| Il1beta | CAACCAACAAGTGATATTCTCGATG | GATCCACACTCTCCAGCTGCA |
| Npy | CAGAAAACGCCCCCAGAAC | CGGGAGAACAAGTTTCATTTCC |
| Pgc1alpha | AAAGGATGCGCTCTCGTTCA | GGAATATGGTGATCGGGAACA |
| Pomc | AGGCCTGACACGTGGAAGAT | AGCAGGAGGGCCAGCAA |
| Prdm16 | CAGCACGGTGAAGCCATTC | GCGTGCATCCGCTTGTG |
| Rpl19 | GAAGGTCAAAGGGAATGTGTTCA | CCTTGTCTGCCTTCAGCTTGT |
| Tnfalpha | TGGGACAGTGACCTGGACTGT | TTCGGAAAGCCCATTTGAGT |
CD36 (cluster of differenciation 36); Fabp4 (fatty acid-binding protein 4); Fatp1 (fatty acid transport protein 1); Fiaf (fasting-induced adipose factor); Glut1 (glucose transporter 1); Glut4 (glucose transporter 4); G6pase (glucose-6-phosphatase); Inos (inducible nitric oxide synthase); Il1beta (interleukin 1 beta); Npy (neuropeptide Y); Pgc1alpha (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor 1 alpha); Pomc (pro-opiomelanocortin); Prdm16 (PR domain containing 16); Rpl19 (60S ribosomal protein L19); Tnfalpha (tumour necrosis factor alpha).