| Literature DB >> 35741001 |
Besma Boubertakh1,2, Cristoforo Silvestri1,2, Vincenzo Di Marzo1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
Obesity is a disease with high potential for fatality. It perfectly fits the disease definition, as cancer does. This is because it damages body structure and functions, both mechanically and biologically, and alters physical, mental, and social health. In addition, it shares many common morbid characteristics with the most feared disease, cancer. For example, it is influenced by a sophisticated interaction between a person's genetics, the environment, and an increasing number of other backgrounds. Furthermore, it displays abnormal cell growth and proliferation events, only limited to white fat, resulting in adipose tissue taking up an increasing amount of space within the body. This occurs through fat "metastases" and via altered signaling that further aggravates the pathology of obesity by inducing ubiquitous dishomeostasis. These metastases can be made graver by angiogenesis, which might boost diseased tissue growth. More common features with cancer include its progressive escalation through different levels of severity and its possibility of re-onset after recovery. Despite all these similarities with cancer, obesity is substantially less agitating for most people. Thus, the ideas proposed herein could have utility to sensitize the public opinion about the hard reality of obesity. This is increasingly needed, as the obesity pandemic has waged a fierce war against our bodies and society in general, while there is still doubt about whether it is a real disease or not. Hence, raising public consciousness to properly face health issues is crucial to improving our health instead of gaining weight unhealthily. It is obviously illogical to fight cancer extremely seriously on the one hand and to consider dying with obesity as self-inflicted on the other. In fact, obesity merits a top position among the most lethal diseases besides cancer.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; cancer; cell growth; cell proliferation; disease; gut microbiome; metastasis; obesity; recurrence; white adipose tissue
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35741001 PMCID: PMC9221301 DOI: 10.3390/cells11121872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1Vicious circles of white adipose tissue (WAT) abnormal cell growth and proliferation, and fat mass metastases. In obesity, the brain becomes less sensitive to the satiety hormone leptin, and this favors feelings of hunger and increases food intake. This further boosts the positive energy balance, induces intestinal flora dysbiosis and augments gut permeability to the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which is highly inflammatory. LPS inhibits the differentiation of preadipocytes to mature fat cells. Thus, more preadipocytes are formed to generate new adipocytes to store the body’s excess of energy, which enhances obesity by hyperplasia. The inhibition of adipogenesis induces mature adipocytes to undergo extreme abnormal cell growth to pack lipids that surpass their maximum storage capacity through excessive hypertrophy. This further causes hypoxia, fibrosis, and eventually cell necrosis. Massive WAT hypertrophy might induce severe hypoxia that can trigger angiogenesis, which, however, generates fragile and dysfunctional capillaries that further boost tissue inflammation. The dead adipocytes attract immune cells—macrophages—to form inflammatory crown-like structures. The affected WAT secretes high leptin levels to the brain to reduce food intake; however, the brain becomes insensitive to leptin due to the ongoing processes of obesity. WAT in the obese organism further secrets inflammatory cytokines to promote the inflammatory reaction in a chain of vicious circles that devastates WAT structure and function. This leads to lipid storage in other organs, like skeletal muscles and vital organs such as the heart, the liver, the kidneys, and the pancreas. Such expansion of WAT localization through ectopic fat depositions that embody “metastases” alters these organs functionality and therefore whole-body homeostasis. In addition, accumulated free fatty acids in blood circulation may injure endothelial cells through provoking oxidative and inflammatory reactions, which might hasten atherosclerotic plaque rupture. This can cause venous or arterial thromboembolism, which can present fatal consequences when affecting vital organs, such as in pulmonary embolism, heart attack, and stroke. These biological alterations are accompanied by those starting from a mechanical origin, such as body weight pressure on the bones and joints or airway blockage, to induce osteoarthritis or obstructive sleep apnea, respectively. These crab (cancer)-leg-like projections of cell growth, cell proliferation, and fat ectopic depositions, and their impact on the whole body in obesity, justly present high similarity with cancer disease metastases. Created with BioRender.com and with MindtheGraph.com. Accessed on 24 March 2022.