| Literature DB >> 34684670 |
Karolline S May1,2, Laura J den Hartigh1,2.
Abstract
Obesity and its complications-including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and certain cancers-constitute a rising global epidemic that has imposed a substantial burden on health and healthcare systems over the years. It is becoming increasingly clear that there is a link between obesity and the gut microbiota. Gut dysbiosis, characterized as microbial imbalance, has been consistently associated with obesity in both humans and animal models, and can be reversed with weight loss. Emerging evidence has shown that microbial-derived metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs)-including acetate, propionate, and butyrate-provide benefits to the host by impacting organs beyond the gut, including adipose tissue. In this review, we summarize what is currently known regarding the specific mechanisms that link gut-microbial-derived SCFAs with adipose tissue metabolism, such as adipogenesis, lipolysis, and inflammation. In addition, we explore indirect mechanisms by which SCFAs can modulate adipose tissue metabolism, such as via perturbation of gut hormones, as well as signaling to the brain and the liver. Understanding how the modulation of gut microbial metabolites such as SCFAs can impact adipose tissue function could lead to novel therapeutic strategies for the prevention and treatment of obesity.Entities:
Keywords: GLP-1; PYY; acetate; adipogenesis; butyrate; gut microbiota; host metabolism; lipolysis; obesity; propionate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34684670 PMCID: PMC8538331 DOI: 10.3390/nu13103666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Taxa that produce SCFAs.
| SCFA | Taxa | References | SCFA | Taxa | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acetate | [ | Butyrate | [ | ||
| Propionate | [ |
Abbreviations—SCFAs: short-chain fatty acids; spp.: multiple species.
Figure 1SCFA-mediated effects on host metabolism. Non-digestible dietary fibers consumed by the host are fermented by microbiota in the gut, resulting in the production of the SCFAs acetate (C2), propionate (C3), and butyrate (C4). These SCFAs are absorbed by diffusion or via GPR41 and GPR43 in the intestine. Systemic SCFAs can directly signal to adipose tissue to modulate adipogenesis, lipolysis, inflammation, browning, and adipokine synthesis. SCFAs can indirectly impact adipose tissue via effects on gut hormones, the brain, and the liver. In addition to directly targeting the brain via GPR41, SCFAs can also modulate the secretion of gut hormones such as GLP-1 and PYY, which target the brain to regulate food intake. SCFAs may also target the liver to reduce hepatic glucose production and lipid accumulation, likely through the activation of AMPK. Solid lines indicate direct effects of SCFAs via adipose tissue; dashed lines indicate indirect effects of SCFAs; dotted lines indicate hypothesized effects of SCFAs.
SCFAs modulate adipocyte metabolism in humans.
| Experimental Design | Cell Type/Subject | Outcome | Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acetate given rectally (60 mM) or intravenously (20 mM), once weekly, for 4 weeks. | Hyperinsulinemic women | ↑ PYY, GLP-1 (rectal) | Freeland et al. 2010 [ |
| WAT explants treated with 1–10 mM propionate for 24 h. | OAT and SAT explants from overweight women ( | ↑ Leptin mRNA | Al-Lahham et al. 2010 [ |
| WAT explants treated with 3 mM propionate for 24 h. | OAT explants from overweight women ( | ↑ LPL, GLUT4, SREBP-1c mRNA | Al-Lahham et al. 2012 [ |
| Intravenous acetate infusion (140 mM) for 90 min. | Men and women with ( | ↑ serum acetate | Fernandes et al. 2012 [ |
| 10 g oral inulin-proionate ester (acute study). | Healthy men and women | ↓ Energy intake, intra-abdominal adipose tissue distribution, body weight, intrahepatic cholesterol | Chambers et al. 2015 [ |
| Colonic infusion with 200 mM SCFA mixtures for 4 days. | Normoglycemic men ( | ↑ Energy expenditure, fat oxidation, PYY | Canfora et al. 2017 [ |
| Colonic infusion with 180 mM acetate infusions for 3 days. | Overweight/obese men ( | ↑ Fasting fat oxidation, PYY, postprandial glucose and insulin | van der Beek et al. 2016 [ |
| 1 μmol/L–1 mM single SCFA (acetate, propionate, butyrate) or SCFA mixtures for 6 h. | hMADS | ↓ Lipolysis, pHSL(SER650) | Jocken et al. 2017 [ |
| Plasma acetate measurement | SAT and VAT explants from morbidly obese men and women ( | ↑ Plasma acetate, browning markers | Moreno-Navarrete et al. 2018 [ |
| Oral delivery of butyrate (4 g/day) for 4 weeks | Healthy ( | ↑ Hepatic insulin sensitivity in lean subjects | Bouter et al. 2018 [ |
| WAT explants treated with 3 mM propionate for 24 h | SAT explants from women (mean BMI = 28) ( | ↓ TNF-α, IL-10, CD163, MMP-9 | Al-Lahham et al. 2019 [ |
Relevant studies were identified using PubMed query searches for “short-chain fatty acids” OR “acetate” OR “propionate” OR “butyrate” AND “human” AND “adipose tissue” OR “adipocyte” AND “obesity”. Eleven studies examining the effects of SCFAs on adipocyte metabolism were thus identified. Abbreviations—SCFAs: short-chain fatty acids; PYY: peptide YY; GLP-1: glucagon-like peptide 1; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-α; LPL: lipoprotein lipase; SREBP-1c: sterol regulatory element-binding protein; hMADS: human multipotent adipose-tissue-derived stem cells; HSL; hormone-sensitive lipase; SAT: subcutaneous adipose tissue; VAT: visceral adipose tissue; OAT: omental adipose tissue; MIP-1α/β: macrophage inflammatory proteins-1α/β; CCL5: C-C-chemokine ligand 5; FFA: free fatty acid; GLUT4: glucose transporter type 4; ↑: increased; ↓: decreased.
SCFAs modulate adipocyte lipolysis: in vitro studies.
| Experimental Design | Cell Type | Outcome | Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 μmol/L–1 mmol/L single SCFA (acetate, propionate, butyrate) or SCFA mixtures for 6 h. | hMADS | Acetate and SCFA mixtures high in acetate decreased lipolysis in basal human adipocytes. | Jocken et al., 2017 [ |
| 0.1–0.3 mmol/L acetate and propionate for up to 4 h. | 3T3-L1, primary mouse adipocytes | Acetate and propionate inhibited lipolytic activity by approximately 50% in both cell types. | Ge et al., 2008 [ |
| 0.1–1 mmol/L butyrate for 24 h. | 3T3-L1, RAW264.7 murine macrophages | Butyrate reduced lipolysis in co-cultured adipocytes in a dose-dependent manner. | Ohira et al., 2013 [ |
| 20 mmol/L acetate or 5 mmol/L butyrate for up to 4 h. | 3T3-L1 | Both acetate and butyrate increased the rate of lipolysis in a dose-dependent manner. | Rumberger et al., 2014 [ |
| 4 mM acetate for up to 2 h. | 3T3-L1 | Acetate decreased ISO-mediated lipolysis in adipocytes, mirrored by NEFA release in a time-dependent manner. | Aberdein et al., 2014 [ |
| 3–10 mM acetate, propionate and butyrate for 10 min. | Primary human and rat adipocytes | Propionate and butyrate inhibited lipolysis in human adipocytes, whereas acetate exerted an antilipolytic effect in primary rat adipocytes. | Heimann et al., 2015 [ |
| 0.01–0.1 μmol/L acetate and propionate for 7 days. | 3T3-L1 | Acetate and propionate blunted ISO-induced lipolysis in adipocytes, in a dose-dependent manner. | Hong et al. 2005 [ |
Relevant studies were identified using PubMed query searches for “short-chain fatty acids” OR “acetate” OR “propionate” OR “butyrate” AND “adipocyte” OR “3T3-L1” AND “lipolysis”. Seven studies examining the effects of SCFAs on adipocyte lipolysis were thus identified. Abbreviations—SCFAs: short-chain fatty acids; hMADS: human multipotent adipose tissue-derived stem cells; NEFAs: non-esterified fatty acids; ISO: isoproterenol. Fully differentiated 3T3-L1 and/or primary cells were used in the above-listed studies.
SCFAs promote adipogenesis and browning of adipose tissue.
| Experimental Design | Cell or Tissue Type | Outcome | Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 mM butyrate for up to 7 days. | 3T3-L1 | ↑ Adipogenesis | Toscani et al. 1990 [ |
| 0.1–1.5 mM butyrate for up to 9 days. | Porcine stromal vascular | ↑ adipogenesis | Yan et al. 2015 [ |
| 0.1–3 mM butyrate and propionate on day 10 of differentiation. | Porcine stromal vascular | ↑ Adipogenesis | Li et al. 2014 [ |
| 6.4 mM acetate, 3.2 mM propionate, 0.8 mM butyrate for 10 days. | 3T3-L1 | ↑ Adipogenesis | Yu et al. 2018 [ |
| 0.1 μmol/L acetate for 7 days. | 3T3-L1 | ↑ Adipogenesis | Hong et al. 2005 [ |
| 8 mM propionate and butyrate ~11 days. | SGBS | No effects on adipogenesis or adipogenic markers | Alex et al. 2013 [ |
| 0.01–0.1 mM propionate for 8 days. | Broiler adipocytes | No effects on adipogenesis | Li et al. 2021 [ |
| Plasma acetate measurement | SAT and VAT adipose tissue | ↑ Browning adipogenesis | Moreno-Navarrete et al. 2018 [ |
| 10 mM acetate for up to 7 days. | IM-BAT | ↑ Browning adipogenesis | Hu et al. 2016 [ |
| 1 mM acetate | 3T3-L1 | ↑ Browning adipogenesis | Hanatani et al. 2016 [ |
| 5% wt wt−1 acetate, propionate, butyrate or mixture SCFA supplemented (3:1:1 ratio) in high-fat diet for 16 weeks. | C57Bl/6J mice | ↑ Browning adipogenesis | Lu et al. 2016 [ |
Relevant studies were identified using PubMed query searches for “short-chain fatty acids” OR “acetate” OR “propionate” OR “butyrate” AND “adipocyte” OR “3T3-L1” AND “adipogenesis” OR “browning”. Eleven studies examining the effects of SCFAs on adipocyte adipogenesis and/or browning were thus identified. Abbreviations—aP2: adipocyte fatty-acid-binding protein; β-F1: b subunit of the mitochondrial H+- ATP synthase; C/EBPα/β: CCAAT- enhancer-binding proteins; CIDEA: cell-death-inducing DNA fragmentation factor-α-like effector A; COX IV: cytochrome c oxidase IV; cyt-c: cytochrome c somatic; SGBS: human Simpson–Golabi–Behmel syndrome cells; DIO2: iodothyrinine deiodinase 2; FAS: fatty acid synthase; FATP4: fatty acid transporter protein 4; LPL: lipoprotein lipase; NRF: nuclear respiratory factor 1; PPAR-γ: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma; PRDM16: PR domain containing 16; SREBP-1c: sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1c; TBX1: T-box transcription factor 1; Tfam: mitochondrial transcription factor A; TMEM26: transmembrane protein 26; UCP1: uncoupling protein; SAT: subcutaneous adipose tissue; VAT: visceral adipose tissue; IM-BAT: immortalized brown adipocyte cells. ↑: increased; ↓: decreased.