Adipogenic capacity and the susceptibility to type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome

  1. May-Yun Wang*,
  2. Paul Grayburn,
  3. Shuyuan Chen,
  4. Mariella Ravazzola,
  5. Lelio Orci, and
  6. Roger H. Unger*,§,
  1. *Touchstone Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390-8854;
  2. §Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75216;
  3. Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75226; and
  4. Department of Cell Physiology and Metabolism, University Medical Center, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
  1. 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
  • 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.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0801981105/DCSupplemental.

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