| Literature DB >> 35012577 |
Daniel A Dumesic1, Vasantha Padmanabhan2, Gregorio D Chazenbalk3, David H Abbott4.
Abstract
As a common endocrinopathy of reproductive-aged women, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is characterized by hyperandrogenism, oligo-anovulation and polycystic ovarian morphology. It is linked with insulin resistance through preferential abdominal fat accumulation that is worsened by obesity. Over the past two millennia, menstrual irregularity, male-type habitus and sub-infertility have been described in women and confirm that these clinical features of PCOS were common in antiquity. Recent findings in normal-weight hyperandrogenic PCOS women show that exaggerated lipid accumulation by subcutaneous (SC) abdominal stem cells during development to adipocytes in vitro occurs in combination with reduced insulin sensitivity and preferential accumulation of highly-lipolytic intra-abdominal fat in vivo. This PCOS phenotype may be an evolutionary metabolic adaptation to balance energy storage with glucose availability and fatty acid oxidation for optimal energy use during reproduction. This review integrates fundamental endocrine-metabolic changes in healthy, normal-weight PCOS women with similar PCOS-like traits present in animal models in which tissue differentiation is completed during fetal life as in humans to support the evolutionary concept that PCOS has common ancestral and developmental origins.Entities:
Keywords: Adipocyte; Adipose stem cells; Body fat distribution; Developmental programming; Hyperandrogenism; Insulin resistance; Metabolic adaptation; Nonhuman primates; Polycystic ovary syndrome; Sheep
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35012577 PMCID: PMC8744313 DOI: 10.1186/s12958-021-00878-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Biol Endocrinol ISSN: 1477-7827 Impact factor: 4.982
Fig. 1Altered molecular pathways of subcutaneous (SC) abdominal adipogenesis in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) as a risk factor for lipotoxicity. In normal-weight PCOS women, exaggerated adipose stem cell (ASC) development to adipocytes occurs via androgen-independent mechanisms [23, 50]. Simultaneously, androgen excess inhibits early-stage adipogenesis, diminishes insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, promotes lipid storage and impairs catecholamine-stimulated lipolysis [31, 32, 35, 40, 47], favoring abdominal fat deposition and increased energy availability through hyperandrogenism and insulin resistance, respectively. These same traits are worsened in overweight/obese PCOS women who have greater preferential abdominal fat accumulation, hyperandrogenism, and systemic insulin resistance [2], along with impaired insulin suppression of lipolysis [2, 44], promoting ectopic lipid deposition and lipotoxicity [1]
Fig. 2Metabolic adaptation in polycystic ovary syndrome. Inherently accelerated adipogenesis, along with enhanced intracellular aldo-ketoreductase type 1C3-mediated testosterone generation, in subcutaneous (SC) abdominal adipose promotes lipid storage (through increased lipogenesis and decreased lipolysis) to protect against insulin resistance. Simultaneously, hyperandrogenemia accompanies preferential accumulation of highly-lipolytic intra-abdominal fat with an opposite effect. As a result, SC fat storage counterbalances increased circulating glucose and free fatty acid (FFA) availability for energy use. When energy intake exceeds fat storage capacity, excess fatty acid influx into skeletal muscle and liver promotes lipotoxicity through ectopic lipid accumulation accompanied by oxidative stress, insulin resistance and inflammation in non-adipose tissue