Adipogenic capacity and the susceptibility to type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome
- May-Yun Wang*,
- Paul Grayburn†,
- Shuyuan Chen†,
- Mariella Ravazzola‡,
- Lelio Orci‡, and
- Roger H. Unger*,§,¶
- *Touchstone Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390-8854;
- §Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75216;
- †Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75226; and
- ‡Department of Cell Physiology and Metabolism, University Medical Center, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
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Contributed by Roger H. Unger, February 27, 2008 (received for review November 28, 2007)
Abstract
To determine whether adipocyte storage capacity influences the onset and severity of type 2 diabetes and other components of the metabolic syndrome, we made normal and db/db mice resistant to obesity by overexpressing leptin receptor-b on the aP2-Lepr-b promoter. On a 4% diet, these mice have no phenotype, but on a 60% fat diet, they resist diet-induced obesity because constitutive adipocyte-specific overexpression of Lepr-b prevents obesity via the antilipogenic autocrine/paracrine action of leptin on adipocytes. After 8 months on the same 60% fat diet, body fat of transgenic mice was 70% below WT controls. Cardiac and liver fat was elevated in the transgenics, and their hyperinsulinemia was more marked, suggesting greater insulin resistance. The aP2-Lepr-b transgene also prevented obesity in db/db mice; at 10 weeks of age their body fat was half that of the db/db mice. This lack of obesity was attributable to reduced expression of sterol regulatory element binding protein-1c and its target lipogenic enzymes in adipose tissue and a 6-fold increase in Pref-1 mRNA. Severe diabetes was present in transgenics at 4 weeks of age, 10 weeks before db/db controls. Echocardiographic evidence of cardiomyopathy appeared at 10 weeks, weeks before the db/db mice. Histologically, loss of β cells and myocardial fibrosis was present in the transgenic group at least 6 weeks before the db/db mice. These results suggest that the expression level of genes that regulate the adipogenic response to overnutrition profoundly influences the age of onset and severity of diet-induced type 2 diabetes and co-morbidities.
Footnotes
- ¶To whom correspondence should be addressed at: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Boulevard, L5.202, Dallas, TX 75390-8854. E-mail: roger.unger{at}utsouthwestern.edu
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Author contributions: R.H.U. designed research; M.-Y.W. performed research; P.G., S.C., M.R., and L.O. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; M.R. and L.O. analyzed data; and R.H.U. wrote the paper.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0801981105/DCSupplemental.
- © 2008 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA










