| Literature DB >> 34069652 |
Andressa Reginato1,2,3, Alana Carolina Costa Veras2,3, Mayara da Nóbrega Baqueiro2,3, Carolina Panzarin2,3, Beatriz Piatezzi Siqueira2,3, Marciane Milanski2,3, Patrícia Cristina Lisboa1, Adriana Souza Torsoni2,3.
Abstract
Obesity is a global health issue for which no major effective treatments have been well established. High-fat diet consumption is closely related to the development of obesity because it negatively modulates the hypothalamic control of food intake due to metaflammation and lipotoxicity. The use of animal models, such as rodents, in conjunction with in vitro models of hypothalamic cells, can enhance the understanding of hypothalamic functions related to the control of energy balance, thereby providing knowledge about the impact of diet on the hypothalamus, in addition to targets for the development of new drugs that can be used in humans to decrease body weight. Recently, sphingolipids were described as having a lipotoxic effect in peripheral tissues and the central nervous system. Specifically, lipid overload, mainly from long-chain saturated fatty acids, such as palmitate, leads to excessive ceramide levels that can be sensed by the hypothalamus, triggering the dysregulation of energy balance control. However, no systematic review has been undertaken regarding studies of sphingolipids, particularly ceramide and sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), the hypothalamus, and obesity. This review confirms that ceramides are associated with hypothalamic dysfunction in response to metaflammation, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, and lipotoxicity, leading to insulin/leptin resistance. However, in contrast to ceramide, S1P appears to be a central satiety factor in the hypothalamus. Thus, our work describes current evidence related to sphingolipids and their role in hypothalamic energy balance control. Hypothetically, the manipulation of sphingolipid levels could be useful in enabling clinicians to treat obesity, particularly by decreasing ceramide levels and the inflammation/endoplasmic reticulum stress induced in response to overfeeding with saturated fatty acids.Entities:
Keywords: central nervous system; lipotoxicity; sphingolipids
Year: 2021 PMID: 34069652 PMCID: PMC8160791 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22105357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Sphingolipid general pathway. Enzymes are presented in green and drugs commonly used in the studies reviewed here are presented in red. CDase—Ceramidase; CerK—Ceramide Kinase; CerS—Ceramide Synthase; C1P—Ceramide-1-Phosphate; D609—Tricyclodecan-9-yl-Xanthogenate; FTY720—Fingolimod; GCase—Glucosylceramidase; GCS—Glucosylceramide Synthase; Pase—Phosphatase; PtdEtn—Phosphatidylethanolamine; SMase—Sphingomyelinase; SphK—Sphingosine Kinase (1 and 2); SPL—Sphingosine-1-phosphate Liase; SPPase—Sphingosine Phosphate Phosphatase; SPT—Serine Palmitoil-CoA Transferase; S1P—Sphingosine-1-phosphate.
Eligibility criteria applied in this study.
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Rodents (offspring and/or adults); hypothalamic cell lines; or primary hypothalamic cell culture. | Other cells than hypothalamic; non-rodents and studies involving human subjects. |
| Intervention | High-fat feeding; genetic models of obesity; treatment with fatty acids; treatment with cytokines; treatment with sphingolipids (ceramide or sphingosine-1-phosphate). | Other genetic backgrounds; animals with protein restriction or receiving any other treatment. |
| Comparison | Sphingolipid levels (ceramide and sphingosine-1-phosphate); fasting. | Studies related to ganglioside metabolism. |
| Outcomes | Alterations in sphingolipid metabolism following disturbances in energy balance control. | Other outcomes not relevant to energy balance control. |
| Type of publication | Original article | Nonoriginal article |
| Other selection criteria | Studies following these main characteristics were included: animal and cell culture studies from 1990 until 2020. | Non-English language. |
Figure 2Risk of bias (RoB) from in vitro studies. Summary of the authors’ judgments concerning risks from included in vitro studies. = high reliability, = not clear, = low reliability.
Figure 3Risk of bias (RoB) from in vivo studies. Summary of the authors’ judgments concerning risks from included in vivo studies. = high reliability, = not clear, = low reliability.
Figure 4Flowchart of study selection process applied in this study.
Characteristics and analysis of outcomes for in vitro studies.
| Outcomes Type | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Authors | Design | Treatment | Sphingolipid Extraction/Analysis Method | Sphingolipid Levels | Inflammatory Parameters | Neuropeptide Levels |
| Sortino et al., 1999 | Hypothalamic GT1-7 neuronal cells. |
TNF-α (20 ng/mL) for 15, 30 and 60 min. D609 (5 mg/mL) for 1 h. | Diacylglycerol kinase assay | ↑ Cer-1-P (accumulation of ceramide) in GT1-7 cells stimulated with TNF-α. | ↑ TNFR1 and TNFR2 in GT1-7 cells after TNF-α exposure | Uninformed |
| Davis et al., 2006 | Wild-type mixed AH cultures |
IL-1b (10–12 nM) for 30 s, 1, 2,5 and 10 min. C2-ceramide (5–10 lM) for 2,5,10 and 15 min. | Uninformed | ↑ Src phosphorylation in the AH cultures after treatment with C2-Ceramide or IL-1β (concentration and time-dependent) | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| McFadden et al., 2014 | PHN, N38HN, or R7HN cells. |
Palmitate (PA) (5200 mM). C75 (570 mM). FSG67 (5160 mM). C89b (540 mM). TG (5300 nM). For 18 or 24 h. | Lipidomics | ↑ Ceramide levels in PHD exposed to palmitate. | ↑ TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6 mRNA levels in PHN after exposed to C16:0 for 18 h. | Uninformed |
| Morselli et al., 2014a | N43 cells and BV2 cells. |
Pretreated for the indicated time with 10−8 M E2 conjugated with fatty-acid-free BSA (albumin). 10−8 M E2 or 100 μM PA conjugated with BSA alone or in combination for 8 h. Cells were transfected with siRNAs targeting murine ERa or murine PGC-1a or with an unrelated control siRNA. N43 cells were infected with the FLAG-ERa (AdERa) and GFP adenoviral. A total of 4 h after virus exposure and 48 h later, cells were treated as indicated. | Liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization/tandem mass spectrometry | ↑ Ceramide levels in N43 cells exposed to PA. | ↑ TNF-α and IL-6 mRNA expression in N43 and BV2 cells exposed to PA for 8 h. | Uninformed |
| Morselli et al., 2014b | N43 hypothalamic cell line and primary neuronal cell cultures. |
Palmitate. The steroid hormone 17-β estradiol (E2). | Mass spectrometry | Uninformed | ↑ Inflammation in N43 cell line and primary neurons exposed to PA. | Uninformed |
| Silva et al., 2014 | GT1-7 cells. |
Leptin (40 µmol) for 12 h. Transfection with siRNA targeted to STAT3 or scrambled control siRNA. | Western blotting | ↑ S1PR1 protein levels in GT1-7 cells treated with leptin, in a time-dependent manner. | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Campana et al.,2017 | Hypothalamic GT1-7 neuronal cells. |
Palmitate (1 mM) for 24 h. After, cells were stimulated with insulin (100 nM) for 5 min. | Liquid chromatography coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry. | ↑ Ceramide levels (C:16, C:18, C22, C24) in GT1-7 cells after treatment with palmitate. | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Dusaban et al., 2017 | Astrocytes were isolated from P1-P3 postnatal WT and S1P3 KO mice. | siRNA for S1P1, S1P2, S1P3, and control siRNA. S1P2 antagonist JT-013 (1 μM). S1P treatment (0,5 μM, 6 h). S1p3 antagonist SPM-354 (5 μM, 15 min). | Quantitative-PCR | ↑ S1P3 in WT astrocytes after scratch injury. | ↑ COX2 and IL-6 levels in S1P3 KO astrocytes treated with S1P. | Uninformed |
| Tse, E. and Belsham, D., 2018 | mHypoA-POMC/GFP-1, -2, -3, and -4 neurons. |
10, 50, or 100 mM palmitate for 8 and 24 h. 50 mM methylpalmitate for 8 h. 10 nM insulin for 15 min. 1mM C16-ceramide for 8 h. 50 mM oleate for 8 h or cotreated with 50 μM palmitate and 50 μM oleate for 8 h. 100 mM myriocin or 50 mM L-cycloserine for 1 h. Inhibitors treatment for 1 h, [TAK-242, JNK (SP 600125), p38 MAP kinase (SB, 202190), or MEK1/2 (ERK1/2; PD 0325901) and PS- 1145 (10 mM)]. | Uninformed | Uninformed | ↑ mRNA levels of IL-6, IL-1B, TLR4, TNF-α, and NFkB after treatment with 50 mM palmitate for 8 h. | ↑ POMC mRNA expression in mHypoA-POMC/GFP-2 neurons with 50 mM palmitate for 8 h or 1 mM C16-ceramide for 8 h. |
| Sergi et al., 2018 | mHypoE-N42 hypothalamic cell line. | Palmitate (PA- 200 μM). Lauric acid (LA- 200 μM). Oleanolic acid (OA-200 or 125 μM). Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA 200 or 125 μM). LPS 100 ng/mL. Synthesis, L-cycloserine (inhibitor of ceramide) 250 μM. TLR4 inhibitor (CLI-095) 1 μM. | LC- ESI-MS/MS | ↑ C16 ceramide after PA treatment. | ↑ IL-6 and TNF-α expression in N42, N49 cells and hypothalamic cultures, after treatment with PA or LPS. | Uninformed |
| Maldonado-Ruiz et al., 2019 | Microglia primary culture from Wistar rats. | 100 uM palmitic acid. 100 uM palmitoleic acid. 100 uM stearic acid. 100 uM linoleic acid. 25 uM N-hexanoyl-D-sphingosine (C6). 0.1 ug/mL LPS. | Uninformed | Uninformed | ↑ TNF-α, IL-6 and IL-1 after treatment with palmitate. | Uninformed |
Characteristics of in vivo studies.
| Outcome Type | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Authors | Design | Treatment | Weight gain | Food Intake | Adiposity (%) | Energy Expenditure |
| Gao et al., 2011 | Male Sprague Dawley. |
ICV injections of leptin (1 μg), cerulenin (40 μg), myriocin (4μg), N-hexanoyl-D-sphingosine (2.5 μg). CPT1-α adenovirus (overexpression or deletion). | Body weights after infusing leptin into the Arc overexpressing CPT1-α were significantly attenuated compared with the null condition. | ↑ Food intake in rats with overexpression of CPT1-α. | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Borg et al., 2012 | 8 week old male mice of C57BL/6 and ob/ob lineage. |
HFD for 12 weeks. Endurance exercise, once daily, 5 times a week for 6 weeks. | ↑ Body mass in HFD mice | Uninformed | ↑ Epididymal fat mass in HFD mice. | Uninformed |
| Ramírez et al., 2013 | Adult male mice of wild type and CPT1-α knockout. |
Mice received an ICV of 5 mg or an IP of 10 mg of ghrelin. ICV administration of 4 mg of myriocin (1 h before ghrelin administration). ICV administration of 2.5 mg of C6:0 ceramide. | Uninformed | ↑ Food intake after ghrelin IP injection in wild type mice. | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Contreras et al., 2014 | Male Sprague Dawley rats and lean and obese male Zucker rats (LZR, OZR). |
ICV injections with C6 ceramide for 5 days. GRP78 adenoviral vectors for 6–9 days. | ↑ Body weight after C6 injections for 5 days. | Central treatment of C6 ceramide and GRP78 adenovirus did not affect feeding. | ↑ Weight of gonadal and inguinal white adipose tissue promoted by central ceramide injections. | Uninformed |
| Mera et al., 2014 | Male Sprague Dawley. |
Adeno-associated viral vector (AAV-CPT1AM—0.2 mL/min) injected into the VMH to increase CPT1AM. | ↑ Body weight in CPT1AM rats after 20 days of AAV injection | ↑ Food intake in CPT1AM rats after 20 days of AAV injection | ↑ Adiposity in CPT1AM rats | Uninformed |
| Morselli et a., 2014a | 8 week old male and female C57BL/6. |
HFD 42% for 16 weeks. | ↑ Body weight in males and females after consuming HFD for 16 weeks. | Uninformed | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Morselli et al., 2014b | 4 week old male and female C57BL/6. |
HFD 42% for 4 weeks. | ↑ Body weight of males and females after consuming HFD for 4 weeks. | Uninformed | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Silva et al., 2014 | 5 week old male Wistar rats and 10 week old male Swiss, C57BL/6J, ob/ob and db/db mice. |
HFD for 3 months. siRNA S1PR1/STAT3. ICV infusion: Leptin, SEW2871 (50 nM), S1P (50 ng), JSI124 (50 mM), FTY720 (50 mM). | ↓ Body weight in obese rats with ICV injection of S1P. | ↓ Food intake in obese and lean rats after injection of S1P or SEW2871. | ↓ Epididymal fat-pad weight in obese rats with ICV injection of S1P. | ↑ Energy expenditure in rats with ICV injection of S1P. |
| Campana et al., 2017 | 10 week old male Zucker rats (obese or lean) and Wistar. |
ICV injections for 28 days with myriocin (300 nM) or vehicle in Zucker rats. In Wistar rats, either C2-ceramide or DH-C2-ceramide or vehicle (25nM) were acutely ICV injected. Prior to sacrifice, animals received an ICV injection of insulin (2 mUI) or saline. | Central myriocin treatment did not affect body weight in either obese or lean Zucker rats. | Central myriocin treatment did not affect food intake in either obese or lean Zucker rats. | Central myriocin treatment did not affect lean and fat body mass in either obese or lean Zucker rats. | Uninformed |
| Gao et al., 2017 | 6–10 week old male mice of LPL-knockout mice (GFAP-LPL−/−) and C57BL/6. |
Standard chow diet or HFD for 10 weeks. | ↑ Body weight in GFAP-LPL−/− when fed an HFD. | ↑ Food intake in GFAP-LPL−/− when fed an HFD. | ↑ Fat mass in GFAP-LPL−/− when fed an HFD. | ↓ Locomotor activity in LPL knockout with HFD. |
| Laperrousaz et al., 2017 | 8 week old male mice of MBHLpl, C57BL6/J, NexLpl−/−, Agrp−/−. |
Adeno-associated viruses injected into the MBH to increase or deletion LPL. | ↑ Body weight after LPL deletion. | There was no difference | ↑ Adiposity in mice with LPL deletion. | ↓ Locomotor activity and energy expenditure in mice with LPL deletion. |
| Gonzalez-Garcıa et al., 2018 | Female Sprague Dawley |
Rats were bilaterally ovariectomized (OVX) or Sham-operated. ICV injections, after two weeks surgery: estradiol (1 nmol) for 6 days; myriocin (4 mg/day) or TUDCA (10 mg/day) for 6 days; GPR78 adenovirus; shSPTLC1 adenovirus. b3-AR specific antagonist SR59230A (3 mg/kg/day) was administrated subcutaneously twice a day, starting 2 days before the first ICV. | ↑ Body weight in OVX rats after 15 days of surgery. | ↑ Food intake in OVX rats. | ↑ Adiposity in OVX rats. | ↑ Energy expenditure in OVX rats after treatment with estradiol. |
| Hernandez-Carretero et al., 2018 | 12 week old male mice of C57BL/6N. |
LFD (low fat diet, 10% fat) for 18 weeks. HFD (high fat diet, 60% fat) for 18 weeks. SWD (switch diet from HFD to LFD). The SW group were fed HFD for 9 weeks and then switched to LFD for a further 9 weeks. Selective inhibitor of hematopoietic prostaglandin D synthase (HQL-79, 30mg/kg,) was administered by oral gavage for 5 days mice fed HFD. | ↑ Body weight in HFD mice. | ↓ Food intake in HFD fed mice treated with HQL-79 | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Maldonado-Ruiz et al., 2019 | 8 week old male and female Wistar rats. |
Chow diet or cafeteria diet—Maternal Nutritional Programming Model (Male offspring from mothers exposed to Chow or CAF diets). Injected intradermically with 0.2 micrograms/kg of ghrelin or saline. For five days, ICV administration of: artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) (Control), 40 ug/uL palmitic acid (PAL), and 2 ug/uL lipopolysaccharide (LPS). | Uninformed | ↑ Food intake in offspring programmed by the CAF diet. | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Vozella et al., 2019 | 8 week old male mice of C57BL/6J. | Mice were fed a standard diet.
Free feeding (FF). 12 h food deprivation (FD), 1 h refeeding after food deprivation (RF 1h). 6 h refeeding after food deprivation (RF 6h). | Uninformed | Uninformed | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Heras et a., 2020 | Female pups (small litters fed with HFD 45%). | Small litters (SL-4 pups/dam) and normal litter (NL- 12 pups/dam). HFD-45%; Myriocin or C6 treatment (2 ug/rat). | ↑ Overnutrition female rats displayed increased body weight. | Not altered in Myriocin or C6 group | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Lyu et al., 2020 | Regular diet (RD) and high-fat diet (HFD- 60%) for 8 weeks. | ↑ Body weight in HFD-fed mice. | ↑ Food intake in HFD-fed mice. | ↑ Abdominal white fa in HFD-fed mice. | Uninformed | |
| Rawish et al., 2020 | 6–8 week old male mice of C57BL/6N. |
HFD (D12492) or normal fat diet. Once a day, for 6 or 13 weeks, mice received TELmisartan (8 mg/kg) or vehicle by oral gavage. | ↑ Body weight in HFD-fed mice. | ↑ Food intake in HDF-fed mice. | ↑ Fat mass in HFD-fed mice. | ↓ Energy expenditure and locomotion in HDF-fed mice. |
Analysis of outcomes for in vivo studies.
| Outcomes Type | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Authors | Sphingolipid Extraction/Analysis Method | Sphingolipid Levels | Inflammatory Parameters | Neuropeptide Levels |
| Gao et al., 2011 | HPLC coupled with mass spectrometry | ↑ Ceramide level in rats with overexpressing CPT-1a (under fasting condition). | Uninformed | ↑ NPY levels in rats with overexpression of CPT-1a. |
| Borg et al., 2012 | Electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry | ↑ Ceramide species (18:0, 22:0 and 24:0) in the hypothalamus of HFD mice. | Uninformed | |
| Ramírez et al., 2013 | LC-ESI-MS/MS system | ↑ Total ceramides and C:18 ceramides in the wild type mice after ghrelin injection. | ICV injection of myriocin (1 h before ghrelin administration) did not change the levels of inflammatory markers (TLR4, pIKKB, IKKB, NFKB) | ↑ AgRP and NPY levels after ghrelin injection in wild-type mice. |
| Contreras et al., 2014 | Liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization/multistage mass spectrometry system | ↑ Concentration of C16 ceramide in the hypothalamus promoted by central ceramide injections. | ↑ IL-6, TNF-, and pIKKα/β expression in the hypothalamus after treatment with ceramide. | Uninformed |
| Mera et al., 2014 | Lipidomic analysis | Unaltered total ceramide levels. | Unaltered TNF-, IL-6, IL-1, and INOS mRNA expression. | Unaltered POMC, CART, NPY, AgRP mRNA levels. |
| Morselli et a., 2014a | Liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization/tandem mass spectrometry | ↑ Accumulation of ceramides and sphingomielin in the hypothalamus of male mice when compared to females, after HFD feeding. | ↑ TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6 levels in the hypothalamus of male, after HFD feeding. | Uninformed |
| Morselli et al., 2014b | Mass spectrometry | ↑ Ceramide, glucosylceramide, and sphingomyelin levels in male compared to female, consuming HFD for 4 weeks. | ↑ TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-6 levels in male compared to female, after consuming HFD for 4 weeks. | Uninformed |
| Silva et al., 2014 | Kit Assay, Western blot, | ↑ STAT3 phosphorylation in the hypothalamus of obese rats after injection of S1P. | ↑ POMC mRNA in obese rats after injection of S1P or SEW2871, but not alter NPY. | |
| Campana et al., 2017 | Liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry. | ↑ Total ceramide levels in the hypothalamus of obese Zucker rats. | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Gao et al., 2017 | Chromatographic separation and mass spectrometer | ↑ Total ceramide levels and ceramide species (C18:0, C18:1 and C22) in the hypothalamus of GFAP-LPL−/− mice. | ↑ IBA1 in the hypothalamus of GFAP-LPL−/− mice. | ↑ AGRP in the GFAP-LPL−/− mice. |
| Laperrousaz et al., 2017 | Liquid chromatography coupled with LC | Uninformed | NPY and AGRP did not affect | |
| Gonzalez-Garcıa et al., 2018 | Liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry | ↑ Ceramide levels in the hypothalamus after OVX. | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Hernandez-Carretero et al., 2018 | Electrospray ionization | ↑ Ceramide species (C18:1) in adipose, muscle, and plasma of HDF mice. | ↑ F4/80 in HDF and SWD mice. | Uninformed |
| Maldonado-Ruiz et al., 2019 | Uninformed | Uninformed | ↑ IBA-1 in offspring programmed by a maternal CAF diet after ghrelin and palmitic acid injections. | Uninformed |
| Vozella et al., 2019 | Liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry. | ↓ Sphingosine, Sphingosine 1 Phosphate, Diidroxiceramide after 12 h of fasting. | Uninformed | Uninformed |
| Heras et a., 2020 | High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) | ↑ Hypothalamic total ceramide and ceramide species (CERC16, CERC18, CERC18:1, CERC:20, CERC(a)24:1, CERC14:0, CERC16:1, CERC20:1, CERC22:1, and CER24:2) in female rats subjected to early overnutrition. | Uninformed | Myriocin treatment did not change hypothalamic expression of Pomc, Cart, Npy, or Agrp. |
| Lyu et al., 2020 | RNAseq; qRT-PCR | ↑Asah2, Cers2, and Elovl1 were in POMC neurons in the HFD group. | ↑ Chemokines in POMC neurons in the HFD group. | Uninformed |
| Rawish et al., 2020 | Liquid chromatography-mass | ↑ Ceramide, cholesteryl ester, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and sphingomyelin levels in plasma of HFD-fed mice. | ↑ TNF-α and Cxcl12 in HFD-fed mice. | Uninformed |