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1.
Endocrinology ; 155(12): 4697-705, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25279794

ABSTRACT

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, particularly its more aggressive form, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), is associated with hepatic insulin resistance. Osteocalcin, a protein secreted by osteoblast cells in bone, has recently emerged as an important metabolic regulator with insulin-sensitizing properties. In humans, osteocalcin levels are inversely associated with liver disease. We thus hypothesized that osteocalcin may attenuate NASH and examined the effects of osteocalcin treatment in middle-aged (12-mo-old) male Ldlr(-/-) mice, which were fed a Western-style high-fat, high-cholesterol diet for 12 weeks to induce metabolic syndrome and NASH. Mice were treated with osteocalcin (4.5 ng/h) or vehicle for the diet duration. Osteocalcin treatment not only protected against Western-style high-fat, high-cholesterol diet-induced insulin resistance but substantially reduced multiple NASH components, including steatosis, ballooning degeneration, and fibrosis, with an overall reduction in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease activity scores. Further, osteocalcin robustly reduced expression of proinflammatory and profibrotic genes (Cd68, Mcp1, Spp1, and Col1a2) in liver and suppressed inflammatory gene expression in white adipose tissue. In conclusion, these results suggest osteocalcin inhibits NASH development by targeting inflammatory and fibrotic processes.


Subject(s)
Fatty Liver/prevention & control , Metabolic Syndrome/complications , Osteocalcin/therapeutic use , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Fatty Liver/etiology , Fatty Liver/pathology , Fibrosis , Inflammation/metabolism , Insulin Resistance , Liver/metabolism , Liver/pathology , Male , Mice
2.
Cell Metab ; 17(3): 411-22, 2013 Mar 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23473035

ABSTRACT

Adipose-resident T cells (ARTs) regulate metabolic and inflammatory responses in obesity, but ART activation signals are poorly understood. Here, we describe class II major histocompatibility complex (MHCII) as an important component of high-fat-diet (HFD)-induced obesity. Microarray analysis of primary adipocytes revealed that multiple genes involved in MHCII antigen processing and presentation increased in obese women. In mice, adipocyte MHCII increased within 2 weeks on HFD, paralleling increases in proinflammatory ART markers and decreases in anti-inflammatory ART markers, and preceding adipose tissue macrophage (ATM) accumulation and proinflammatory M1 polarization. Mouse 3T3-L1 and primary adipocytes activated T cells in an antigen-specific, contact-dependent manner, indicating that adipocyte MHCII is functional. HFD-fed MHCII(-/-) mice developed less adipose inflammation and insulin resistance than did wild-type mice, despite developing similar adiposity. These investigations uncover a mechanism whereby a HFD-induced adipocyte/ART dialog involving MHCII instigates adipose inflammation and, together with ATM MHCII, escalates its progression.


Subject(s)
Adipocytes/metabolism , Genes, MHC Class II/immunology , Inflammation/immunology , Obesity/immunology , 3T3-L1 Cells , Animals , Blotting, Western , Diet, High-Fat/adverse effects , Female , Flow Cytometry , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Inflammation/etiology , Inflammation/metabolism , Macrophages/immunology , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Microarray Analysis , Obesity/complications , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Statistics, Nonparametric
3.
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol ; 32(12): 2839-46, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23023374

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine the impact of hematopoietic deletion of nuclear factor- (erythroid-derived 2) like 2 factor (Nrf2) on the development of atherosclerosis and liver injury in an obese, hypercholesterolemic mouse model. METHODS AND RESULTS: Two-month-old male low-density lipoprotein receptor-deficient mice were lethally irradiated and transplanted with either wild type or Nrf2-deficient (Nrf2(-/-)) bone marrow cells. At 3 months of age, mice were placed on an obesogenic high-fat diet (HFD), high-cholesterol diet for 7 months. Despite no differences in body weight, body fat percentage, liver fat, plasma glucose, lipids, or insulin, the HFD-fed Nrf2(-/-) bone marrow recipients had increased proinflammatory vascular gene expression, a significant increase in atherosclerosis area (18% versus 28%; P=0.018) and lesion complexity, and a marked increase in liver fibrosis. The acceleration of vascular and liver injury may arise from enhanced macrophage migration, inflammation, and oxidative stress resulting from myeloid Nrf2 deficiency. CONCLUSIONS: Myeloid-derived Nrf2 activity attenuates atherosclerosis development and liver inflammation and fibrosis associated with obesity. Prevention of oxidative stress in macrophage and other myeloid lineage cells may be an important therapeutic target to reduce inflammation-driven complications of obesity.


Subject(s)
Atherosclerosis/epidemiology , Gene Deletion , Hypercholesterolemia/complications , Liver Cirrhosis/epidemiology , Myeloid Cells/metabolism , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/deficiency , Obesity/complications , Animals , Atherosclerosis/metabolism , Atherosclerosis/physiopathology , Bone Marrow Transplantation , Cell Movement/physiology , Comorbidity , Disease Models, Animal , Hypercholesterolemia/epidemiology , Liver Cirrhosis/metabolism , Liver Cirrhosis/physiopathology , Macrophages/metabolism , Macrophages/pathology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/genetics , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/metabolism , Obesity/epidemiology , Oxidative Stress/physiology , Receptors, LDL/deficiency , Receptors, LDL/genetics , Receptors, LDL/metabolism , Risk Factors
4.
Hepatology ; 52(6): 2001-11, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20938947

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a common complication of obesity that can progress to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), a serious liver pathology that can advance to cirrhosis. The mechanisms responsible for NAFLD progression to NASH remain unclear. Lack of a suitable animal model that faithfully recapitulates the pathophysiology of human NASH is a major obstacle in delineating mechanisms responsible for progression of NAFLD to NASH and, thus, development of better treatment strategies. We identified and characterized a novel mouse model, middle-aged male low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR)(-/-) mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD), which developed NASH associated with four of five metabolic syndrome (MS) components. In these mice, as observed in humans, liver steatosis and oxidative stress promoted NASH development. Aging exacerbated the HFD-induced NASH such that liver steatosis, inflammation, fibrosis, oxidative stress, and liver injury markers were greatly enhanced in middle-aged versus young LDLR(-/-) mice. Although expression of genes mediating fatty acid oxidation and antioxidant responses were up-regulated in young LDLR(-/-) mice fed HFD, they were drastically reduced in MS mice. However, similar to recent human trials, NASH was partially attenuated by an insulin-sensitizing peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARγ) ligand, rosiglitazone. In addition to expected improvements in MS, newly identified mechanisms of PPARγ ligand effects included stimulation of antioxidant gene expression and mitochondrial ß-oxidation, and suppression of inflammation and fibrosis. LDLR-deficiency promoted NASH, because middle-aged C57BL/6 mice fed HFD did not develop severe inflammation and fibrosis, despite increased steatosis. CONCLUSION: MS mice represent an ideal model to investigate NASH in the context of MS, as commonly occurs in human disease, and NASH development can be substantially attenuated by PPARγ activation, which enhances ß-oxidation.


Subject(s)
Fatty Liver/prevention & control , Receptors, LDL/deficiency , Thiazolidinediones/therapeutic use , Aging/physiology , Animals , Antioxidants/metabolism , Dietary Fats/adverse effects , Fatty Liver/genetics , Gene Expression , Hepatitis/etiology , Liver/drug effects , Liver/metabolism , Male , Metabolic Syndrome , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Mitochondria, Liver/physiology , Oxidative Stress , PPAR gamma/metabolism , Rosiglitazone
5.
Circ Res ; 104(6): e42-54, 2009 Mar 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19265038

ABSTRACT

Excess food intake leads to obesity and diabetes, both of which are well-known independent risk factors for atherosclerosis, and both of which are growing epidemics in an aging population. We hypothesized that aging enhances the metabolic and vascular effects of high fat diet (HFD) and therefore examined the effect of age on atherosclerosis and insulin resistance in lipoprotein receptor knockout (LDLR(-/-)) mice. We found that 12-month-old (middle-aged) LDLR(-/-) mice developed substantially worse metabolic syndrome, diabetes, and atherosclerosis than 3-month-old (young) LDLR(-/-) mice when both were fed HFD for 3 months, despite similar elevations in total cholesterol levels. Microarray analyses were performed to analyze the mechanism responsible for the marked acceleration of atherosclerosis in middle-aged mice. Chow-fed middle-aged mice had greater aortic expression of multiple antioxidant genes than chow-fed young mice, including glutathione peroxidase-1 and -4, catalase, superoxide dismutase-2, and uncoupling protein-2. Aortic expression of these enzymes markedly increased in young mice fed HFD but decreased or only modestly increased in middle-aged mice fed HFD, despite the fact that systemic oxidative stress and vascular reactive oxygen species generation, measured by plasma F2alpha isoprostane concentration (systemic) and dihydroethidium conversion and p47phox expression (vascular), were greater in middle-aged mice fed HFD. Thus, the mechanism for the accelerated vascular injury in older LDLR(-/-) mice was likely the profound inability to mount an antioxidant response. This effect was related to a decrease in vascular expression of 2 key transcriptional pathways regulating the antioxidant response, DJ-1 and forkhead box, subgroup O family (FOXOs). Treatment of middle-aged mice fed HFD with the antioxidant apocynin attenuated atherosclerosis, whereas treatment with the insulin sensitizer rosiglitazone attenuated both metabolic syndrome and atherosclerosis. Both treatments decreased oxidative stress. A novel effect of rosiglitazone was to increase expression of Nrf2 (nuclear factor [erythroid-derived 2]-like 2), a downstream target of DJ-1 contributing to enhanced expression of vascular antioxidant enzymes. This investigation underscores the role of oxidative stress when multiple atherosclerotic risk factors, particularly aging, converge on the vessel wall and emphasizes the need to develop effective strategies to inhibit oxidative stress to protect aging vasculature.


Subject(s)
Aging/metabolism , Antioxidants/metabolism , Atherosclerosis/metabolism , Diet, Atherogenic , Gene Expression Regulation , Acetophenones/pharmacology , Aging/genetics , Aging/pathology , Animals , Atherosclerosis/genetics , Atherosclerosis/pathology , Diabetes Mellitus/genetics , Diabetes Mellitus/metabolism , Diabetes Mellitus/pathology , Eating , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Knockout Techniques , Humans , Insulin Resistance/genetics , Metabolic Syndrome/genetics , Metabolic Syndrome/metabolism , Metabolic Syndrome/pathology , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Obesity/genetics , Obesity/metabolism , Obesity/pathology , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Oxidative Stress/drug effects , Oxidative Stress/genetics , Receptors, LDL/genetics
6.
PPAR Res ; 2009: 438673, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20300579

ABSTRACT

PPARgamma ligands have been shown to have antiproliferative effects on many cell types. We herein report that a synthetic dominant-negative (DN) PPARgamma mutant functions like a growth factor to promote cell cycle progression and cell proliferation in human coronary artery smooth muscle cells (CASMCs). In quiescent CASMCs, adenovirus-expressed DN-PPARgamma promoted G1-->S cell cycle progression, enhanced BrdU incorporation, and increased cell proliferation. DN-PPARgamma expression also markedly enhanced positive regulators of the cell cycle, increasing Rb and CDC2 phosphorylation and the expression of cyclin A, B1, D1, and MCM7. Conversely, overexpression of wild-type (WT) or constitutively-active (CA) PPARgamma inhibited cell cycle progression and the activity and expression of positive regulators of the cell cycle. DN-PPARgamma expression, however, did not up-regulate positive cell cycle regulators in PPARgamma-deficient cells, strongly suggesting that DN-PPARgamma effects on cell cycle result from blocking the function of endogenous wild-type PPARgamma. DN-PPARgamma expression enhanced phosphorylation of ERK MAPKs. Furthermore, the ERK specific-inhibitor PD98059 blocked DN-PPARgamma-induced phosphorylation of Rb and expression of cyclin A and MCM7. Our data thus suggest that DN-PPARgamma promotes cell cycle progression and cell growth in CASMCs by modulating fundamental cell cycle regulatory proteins and MAPK mitogenic signaling pathways in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs).

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