| Literature DB >> 30506389 |
Abstract
Mammalian adipose tissue is traditionally categorized into white and brown relating to their function and morphology: while white serves as an energy storage, brown adipose tissue acts as the heat generator maintaining the core body temperature. The most recently identified type of fat, beige adipocyte tissue, resembles brown fat by morphology and function but is developmentally more related to white. The synthesis of beige fat, so-called browning of white fat, has developed into a topical issue in diabetes and metabolism research. This is due to its favorable effect on whole-body energy metabolism and the fact that it can be recruited during adult life. Indeed, brown and beige adipose tissues have been demonstrated to play a role in glucose homeostasis, insulin sensitivity, and lipid metabolism-all factors related to pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes. Many agents capable of initiating browning have been identified so far and tested widely in humans and animal models including in vitro and in vivo experiments. Interestingly, several agents demonstrated to have browning activity are in fact secreted as adipokines from brown and beige fat tissue, suggesting a physiological relevance both in beige adipocyte recruitment processes and in maintenance of metabolic homeostasis. The newest findings on agents driving beige fat recruitment, their mechanisms, and implications on type 2 diabetes are discussed in this review.Entities:
Keywords: Beige adipose tissue; Brown adipose tissue; Browning; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30506389 PMCID: PMC6513802 DOI: 10.1007/s13105-018-0658-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol Biochem ISSN: 1138-7548 Impact factor: 4.158
White adipose tissue browning agents
| Factor | Publication | Key findings |
|---|---|---|
| Cold exposure | Young et al. 1984 | Cold induction leads to the emergence of |
| Cousin et al. 1992 | Cold exposure increases UCP1 expression in rodent periovarian WAT | |
| Wang and Wahl 2014 | Cold exposure stimulates BAT insulin signaling in rats | |
| CL 316243 | Ghorbani et al. 1997 | Chronic treatment with CL 316243 leads to occurrence of brown adipocytes within traditional WAT depots |
| BRL 26830A | Cousin et al. 1992 | Treatment with BRL 26830A increases UCP1 expression in periovarian WAT depots in rodents |
| Acetate | Sahuri-Arisoylu et al. 2016 | Acetate treatment show WAT browning capacity in mice |
| Capsaicin | Baskaran et al. 2016 | Capsaicin initiates WAT browning in mice by several different mechanisms |
| Resveratrol | Azhan et al. 2016 | Resveratrol induces Ucp1 and Pgc1α gene expression in mice |
| Berberine | Zhang et al. 2014 | Berberine induces development of brown-like adipocytes in inguinal WAT depot in mice |
| Fish oil | Kim et al. 2015 | Fish oil intake lead to upregulation of UCP1 and the β3 adrenergic receptor in inguinal WAT of mice |
| Decaffeinated green tea extract | Chen et al. 2017 | Decaffeinated green tea extract induces expression of variety of browning related biomarkers |
| Cinnamon | Kwan et al. 2017 | Cinnamon effects UCP1 expression in adipocytes isolated from mouse subcutaneous WAT |
| Ginsenodise Rb1 | Mu et al. 2015 | Ginsenoside Rb1, curcumin and quercetin promote mRNA expression of BAT markers in 3T3-L1 cells |
| Farnesoid X receptor | Fang et al. 2014 | Farnesoid X receptor activation enhance thermogenesis and browning of subcutaneous WAT |
| Liver X receptors | Miao et al. 2015 | Liver X receptors regulate the browning of WAT, activation of mitochondria, and increased energy expenditure |
| MicroRNAs | Shamsi et al. 2017 | MicroRNAs regulate both BAT activation and subcutaneous WAT browning in cold exposure |
| Ng et al. 2017 | miRNA-32 has a role in cold-induced WAT browning | |
| Thiazolidinediones | Petrovic et al. 2010 | Chronic treatment with thiazolidinediones (TZDs) induces browning of WAT by activating PPARγ and PRDM16 |
| Prostaglandin E2 | Garcia-Alonso et al. 2014 | Prostaglandin E2 diverts preadipocyte differentiation in WAT to beige adipocytes |
| Gleevec | Choi et al. 2016 | Gleevec increases brown/beige fat thermogenic and mitochondrial genes in WAT and interscapular BAT in mice |
| Beta-lapachone | Choi et al. 2016 | Beta-lapachone stimulates browning of WAT and increases expression of UCP1 in high-fat diet fed mice |
| Slit 2 derived secretory product | Svensson et al. 2016 | Slit 2 derived secretory product regulates beige adipocyte induction via Prdm16 and activation of PKA signaling |
| Artepillin C | Nishikawa et al. 2016 | Artepillin C induces brown-like adipocytes in mice and primary inguinal WAT derived adipocytes in vitro |
| Adrenomedullin 2 | Zhang et al. 2016 | Adrenomedullin 2 induces browning of rat primary adipocytes in vitro |
| IL-6 | Abdullahi et al. 2017 | Il-6 originated from bone marrow in burn injury regulates WAT browning |
| IL-4 | Nguyen et al. 2011 | IL-4 exerts a macrophage-dependent role in BAT activation during cold exposure |
| IEX-1 | Shahid et al. 2016 | Deficiency of IEX-1 lead to WAT browning via alternative activation of macrophages |
| Thyroid hormones | Medina-Gomez et al. 2008 | Thyroid hormone metabolite TRIAC induces UCP1 expression in abdominal WAT of rats |
| Lee et al. 2012 | Treatment of human adipose-derived stem cells with T3 induces UCP1 expression and mitochondrial biogenesis | |
| Kir et al. 2014 | Parathyroid hormone (PTHr) and tumor-derived parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) administration leads to WAT browning in mice cancer-cachexia models | |
| Weiner et al. 2017 | Thyroid hormones induce WAT browning through both peripheral and central mechanisms | |
| Glucagon-like peptide 1 | Beiroa et al. 2014 | GLP1 stimulates WAT browning and stimulates BAT thermogenesis in mice |
| Leptin | Dodd et al. 2015 | Leptin drives WAT browning through action on hypothalamic neurons |
| Melatonin | Jiménez-Aranda et al. 2013 | Melatonin induces WAT browning on inguinal WAT in rats |
| Natriuretic peptides | Bordicchia et al. 2012 | Natriuretic peptides demonstrate WAT browning capacity with several different mechanisms |
| PTEN | Klepac et al. 2016 | Distinct gene set is associated with WAT browning, including PTEN, Cox2, Foxc2, Folliculin, and Gq |
| TGF-β/Smad3 | Yaday and Rane 2012 | Modulations in TGF-β/Smad3 signaling activate BAT-like phenotype in rodent WAT |
| FGF21 | Fisher et al. 2012 | FGF21 expression is essential for cold-induced recruitment of beige adipocytes |
| Keipert and Jastroch 2014 | FGF21 secretion from skeletal muscle leads to increased browning of epididymal and subcutaneous fat depots in mice | |
| Apelin | Than et al. 2015 | Apelin secreted from brown and white adipocytes stimulates adipose browning |
| Exercise | Wu et al. 1999 | Exercise induces expression of PGC-1α |
| Boström et al. 2012 | Irisin released from muscle during exercise induces WAT browning in human and rodents | |
| PPAR agonists | Fukui et al. 2000 | Treatment with PPAR agonists increases UCP1 expression in different WAT depots |
| Ohno et al. 2012 | Browning effect of PPAR ligands is centered to stabilization and expression of PRDM16 | |
| Petrovic et al. 2010 | Rosiglitazone treatment induces browning of epididymal WAT depot in mice | |
| Zhao et al. 2016 | α/β-Hydrolase domain 6 negatively regulates adipose tissue browning | |
| BMPs | Tseng et al. 2008 | BMP7 is able to induce BAT selective genes in preadipocytes and drive browning of mesenchymal progenitor cells |
| Elsen et al. 2014 | BMP7 and BMP4 induce white-to-brown shifting in primary human adipose stem cells | |
| Ross et al. 2000 | Wingless pathway (Wnt) activation represses brown and white adipogenesis by suppressing the induction of PPARγ and C/EBSα | |
| Lactate | Carrière et al. 2014 | Lactate and β-hydroxybutyrate increase UCP1 gene expression in human and murine WAT |
| Beta-aminoisobutyric acid (BAIBA) | Roberts et al. 2014 | BAIBA increases BAT marker genes in WAT of mice both in vitro and in vivo and BAT-like phenotype in human pluripotent stem cells |
| Retinoic acid | Wang et al. 2017 | Retinoic acid induces WAT browning through activation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling in vitro |