Peptide Designed to Elicit Apoptosis in Adipose Tissue Endothelium Reduces Food Intake and Body Weight

被引:45
作者
Kim, Dong-Hoon [1 ]
Woods, Stephen C. [2 ]
Seeley, Randy J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cincinnati, Dept Internal Med, Cincinnati, OH 45221 USA
[2] Univ Cincinnati, Dept Psychiat, Cincinnati, OH USA
关键词
LIPOPROTEIN-LIPASE ACTIVITY; DIET-INDUCED OBESITY; PROOPIOMELANOCORTIN MESSENGER-RNA; REDUCTION INCREASES ADIPOSE; LEPTIN ACTION; RATS; MICE; EXPRESSION; HYPOTHALAMUS; ANGIOGENESIS;
D O I
10.2337/db09-1141
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
OBJECTIVE-Because adipose tissue is highly vascularized, modifying adipose tissue vasculature may provide a novel method for reducing body fat. A peptide sequence that elicits apoptosis of endothelium in white fat potently reduced body weight. We sought to determine how inhibiting adipose tissue vasculature changes key aspects of energy balance regulation and the neuroendocrine system that maintains energy balance. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS-Lean and obese mice or rats were treated with proapoptotic peptide for 4 or 27 days. Daily enemy intake and expenditure were measured in mice on a low- (LFD) or high-fat diet (HFD) and in rats on a FWD. A conditioned taste aversion test was performed to assess whether proapoptotic peptide produces visceral illness. Hypothalamic neuropeptide Y, agouti-related peptide, and proopiomelanocoritin (POMC) mRNA expression and plasma leptin levels were evaluated. RESULTS-Proapoptotic peptide completely reversed HFD-induced obesity in mice and reduced body weight in mice and rats on a HFD but not in those on a LFD. Fat loss occurred with no change of energy expenditure but reduced food intake that occurred without signs of illness and despite reduced circulating leptin and reduced hypothalamic POMC gene expression, indicating that the decrease in food intake is independent of the action of leptin. CONCLUSIONS-These experiments provide compelling evidence for a previously unknown relationship between the status of adipose tissue vasculature and the regulation of food intake. Diabetes 59:907-915, 2010
引用
收藏
页码:907 / 915
页数:9
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   WEIGHT-REDUCTION INCREASES ADIPOSE BUT DECREASES CARDIAC LPL IN REDUCED-OBESE ZUCKER RATS [J].
BESSESEN, DH ;
ROBERTSON, AD ;
ECKEL, RH .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1991, 261 (02) :E246-E251
[2]   Angiogenesis inhibitor, TNP-470, prevents diet-induced and genetic obesity in mice [J].
Bråkenhielm, E ;
Cao, RH ;
Gao, BH ;
Angelin, B ;
Cannon, B ;
Parini, P ;
Cao, YH .
CIRCULATION RESEARCH, 2004, 94 (12) :1579-1588
[3]   INTRAVENTRICULAR INSULIN AND THE LEVEL OF MAINTAINED BODY-WEIGHT IN RATS [J].
CHAVEZ, M ;
KAIYALA, K ;
MADDEN, LJ ;
SCHWARTZ, MW ;
WOODS, SC .
BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1995, 109 (03) :528-531
[4]   Proopiomelanocortin neurons are direct targets for leptin in the hypothalamus [J].
Cheung, CC ;
Clifton, DK ;
Steiner, RA .
ENDOCRINOLOGY, 1997, 138 (10) :4489-4492
[5]   Hypothalamic mTOR signaling regulates food intake [J].
Cota, D ;
Proulx, K ;
Smith, KAB ;
Kozma, SC ;
Thomas, G ;
Woods, SC ;
Seeley, RJ .
SCIENCE, 2006, 312 (5775) :927-930
[6]   A review of the microcirculation of adipose tissue: Anatomic, metabolic and angiogenic perspectives [J].
Crandall, DL ;
Hausman, GJ ;
Kral, JG .
MICROCIRCULATION-LONDON, 1997, 4 (02) :211-232
[7]   Transgenic overexpression of leptin rescues insulin resistance and diabetes in a mouse model of lipoatrophic diabetes [J].
Ebihara, K ;
Ogawa, Y ;
Masuzaki, H ;
Shintani, M ;
Miyanaga, F ;
Aizawa-Abe, M ;
Hayashi, T ;
Hosoda, K ;
Inoue, G ;
Yoshimasa, Y ;
Gavrilova, O ;
Reitman, ML ;
Nakao, K .
DIABETES, 2001, 50 (06) :1440-1448
[8]   WEIGHT-REDUCTION INCREASES ADIPOSE-TISSUE LIPOPROTEIN-LIPASE RESPONSIVENESS IN OBESE WOMEN [J].
ECKEL, RH ;
YOST, TJ .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1987, 80 (04) :992-997
[9]   Anti-cancer activity of targeted pro-apoptotic peptides [J].
Ellerby, HM ;
Arap, W ;
Ellerby, LM ;
Kain, R ;
Andrusiak, R ;
Del Rio, G ;
Krajewski, S ;
Lombardo, CR ;
Rao, R ;
Ruoslahti, E ;
Bredesen, DE ;
Pasqualini, R .
NATURE MEDICINE, 1999, 5 (09) :1032-1038
[10]   Obesity wars: Molecular progress confronts an expanding epidemic [J].
Flier, JS .
CELL, 2004, 116 (02) :337-350