Abstract
Aims/hypothesis
Consuming a high-fat diet (HFD) induces insulin resistance in white adipose tissue (WAT) within 1 week. However, little is known about the initiating events. One potential mechanism that has remained largely unexplored is excessive mitochondrial emission of reactive oxygen species (ROS).
Methods
To determine the role of mitochondrial ROS emissions at the onset of insulin resistance, wild-type (WT) mice were placed on an HFD for 1 week. WAT insulin sensitivity and inflammation were assessed by western blot. In addition, we optimised/validated a method to determine ROS emissions in permeabilised WAT.
Results
An HFD for 1 week resulted in impaired insulin signalling, increased c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) phosphorylation and an increase in oxidative stress. These changes were associated with an increase in fatty-acid-mediated mitochondrial ROS emissions without any change in mitochondrial respiration/content. To determine that mitochondrial ROS causes insulin resistance, we used transgenic mice that express human catalase in mitochondria (MCAT) as a model of upregulated mitochondrial antioxidant enzyme capacity. MCAT mice displayed attenuated mitochondrial ROS emission, preserved insulin signalling and no inflammatory response following an HFD.
Conclusions/interpretation
Findings from this study suggest that elevated mitochondrial ROS emission contributes to HFD-induced WAT insulin resistance.
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Introduction
White adipose tissue (WAT), originally thought to be simply a lipid storage site, is now widely recognised as a dynamic organ involved in energy metabolism. WAT dysfunction may represent a significant mechanism in the rapid onset of whole-body glucose intolerance with high-fat (HF) feeding, as it has been estimated that adipose tissue can contribute up to 20% of whole-body glucose homeostasis [1, 2]. Short-term (3–7 days) HF feeding results in an increase in WAT insulin resistance and hypoxia [3], as well as an upregulation of the expression of genes encoding inflammatory markers [4]. Even at this early time point, some [4], but not all, studies [5, 6] show WAT macrophage infiltration. As consumption of an HF diet (HFD) continues, WAT is typically characterised by elevated basal lipolytic activity [7], overt macrophage infiltration [8], upregulation of proinflammatory cytokines [9] and an accumulation of oxidative stress markers [10].
A recent study demonstrated that mitochondrial emission of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative stress markers were increased in subcutaneous WAT obtained from obese individuals with type 2 diabetes compared with control participants [11], suggesting alterations within mitochondria contribute to WAT insulin resistance. However, it is unclear if the observed increase in mitochondrial ROS emission was a cause or a consequence of WAT insulin resistance, and therefore the mechanistic link between mitochondrial ROS and the induction of WAT insulin resistance remains ambiguous.
It has also been suggested that adenine nucleotide translocase (ANT)-mediated mitochondrial uncoupling results in WAT hypoxia during an HFD, thereby inducing inflammation and insulin resistance [3]. However, in stark contrast, mechanisms that induce mild mitochondrial uncoupling, such as targeted upregulation of uncoupling protein 1, genetic approaches that result in ‘browning’ of WAT and the administration of artificial mitochondrial uncouplers (i.e. 2,4-dinitrophenol [DNP]), improve insulin sensitivity and decrease obesity [12–14]. Mitochondrial uncoupling promotes energy dissipation in the form of heat loss, as the mitochondrial proton gradient is dissociated from ATP production. By lowering the proton gradient, mitochondrial uncoupling decreases ROS production [15]. In a feedback system an excessive amount of mitochondrial ROS emissions have been shown to induce mitochondrial depolarisation [16]. Therefore, the previously observed HFD-induced uncoupling may be a result of the HFD rather than a direct cause of insulin resistance.
The current study aimed to determine the mechanistic role of mitochondrial ROS in the initiation of HFD-induced insulin resistance in WAT. To this end, WT mice were fed chow or an HFD for 1 week and we evaluated markers of insulin signalling and inflammation in addition to directly measuring WAT mitochondrial ROS emissions. Furthermore, we used MCAT mice, which have the catalase antioxidant enzyme within mitochondria [17–19], to delineate a causal mechanism. Together, the current data implicate increased mitochondrial ROS in the acute HFD-induced activation of WAT insulin resistance.
Methods
Mice
C57BL/6 male (n = 11–12; own colony) and WT and MCAT (B6.Cg-Tg(CAG-OTC/CAT)4033Prab/J; 016197) mice on the same C57BL/6 background (n = 5–7; Jackson Laboratories, Bar Harbor, ME, USA) at the age of 15 weeks were placed on either a chow diet (10% energy from fat; Harlan, Indianapolis, IN, USA) or an HFD (60% energy from fat; D12492, Research Diets, New Brunswick, NJ, USA) for 1 week. Animals had ad libitum access to food and water. Mice were housed in a barrier facility with a 12 h light/dark cycle. All protocols were approved by and performed in accordance with the Committee on Animal Care guidelines at the University of Guelph.
Serum assays
After 6 days of chow or HFD, an insulin tolerance test (ITT) was performed in awake mice as previously described [20]. Briefly, mice were fasted for 4 h, starting at 06:00 hours, venous tail blood glucose was measured at t = 0, 5, 10, 15, 30, 60, 90 min after an i. p. insulin injection (1 U/kg body weight; Humulin, Lilly, Indianapolis, IN, USA). Insulin (Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA), NEFA (Wako Chemicals, Richmond, VA, USA) and glycerol were measured, using commercially available kits, in 2 h fasted serum samples from anaesthetised (40 mg/g pentobarbitol) mice after 7 days of the diet intervention.
In vivo insulin stimulation
WAT was excised before (basal) and 15 min after an intravenous insulin injection (1 U/kg body weight, Humulin) in anaesthetised mice. Tissue was immediately flash frozen in liquid nitrogen for western blot analysis, and the animals were then killed. Blood glucose was measured with a glucose meter (Abbott Diabetes Care, Alameda, CA, USA).
Western blot analysis
WAT was homogenised as previously described [21]. Standard SDS-PAGE procedures were followed. Antibodies included total and phosphorylated Akt, c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK)1/2, P38-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), extracellular signalling-related kinase (ERK)1/2 and hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL; Cell Signaling, Danvers, MA, USA), as well as mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation complexes (OXPHOS; MitoSciences, Eugene, OR, USA), monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1; Cell Signaling), catalase, superoxide dismutase (SOD)2 (Abcam, Cambridge, UK) and trans-4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4-HNE; Alpha Diagnostics, San Antonio, TX, USA), with α-tubulin (Abcam) as a loading control. Protein carbonylation (Oxyblot, Millipore) was determined according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Adipocyte cell sizing and immunohistochemistry
Adipose tissue was fixed, embedded and stained as previously reported [22]. Macrophage infiltration was assessed by F4/80 (1:100, AbD Serotec, BioRad, Hercules, CA, USA) staining visualised using the Vectastain ABC kit (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA, USA). Images were taken with an Olympus (Tokyo, Japan) microscope at ×40 magnification and analysed with ImageJ 1.48 (National Institutes of Health) software obtained from http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/download.html.
High-resolution respirometry
Mitochondrial respiration was determined in permeabilised WAT in an Oxygraph high-resolution respirometer chamber at 37°C (Oroboros Instruments, Innsbruck, Austria) as previously described [22, 23]. ADP-stimulated respiration (state 3) was measured in the presence of pyruvate (5 mmol/l), malate (5 mmol/l) and ADP (5 mmol/l) or malate (5 mmol/l), l-carnitine (5 mmol/l), palmitoyl-CoA (50 μmol/l) and ADP (5 mmol/l). Oligomycin-inhibited respiration (state 4o) was determined in the presence of the above substrates with the addition of oligomycin (6 μg/ml). Cytochrome c (10 μmol/l) was added to the chamber to check the integrity of the outer mitochondrial membrane [24].
ROS measurements
Mitochondrial H2O2 emissions were determined as previously described for skeletal muscle [18, 21]. Briefly, ∼5 mg (wet weight) finely minced adipose tissue was loaded into a cuvette containing Amplex Red (Invitrogen, Waltham, MA, USA), horseradish peroxidase (1 U/ml), digitonin (10 μg/ml) and oligomycin (6.7 μg/ml) in Buffer Z (K-MES 105 mmol/l, KCl 30 mmol/l, EGTA 1 mmol/l, K2HPO4 10 mmol/l, MgCl2 5 mmol/l, glutamate 5 μmol/l, malate 5 μmol/l and BSA 0.5%, pH 7.4). Mitochondrial H2O2 emission rates were determined in the presences of DNP (166.7 μmol/l), ADP (5 mmol/l), rotenone (6.7 μmol/l), malonate (6.7 mmol/l) and/or with the addition of pyruvate + malate (5 mmol/l), succinate (10 mmol/l), glycerol 3-phosphate (G3P; 5 mmol/l) or lipids; l-carnitine (5 mmol/l) + palmitoyl-CoA (50 μmol/l). A standard curve was made for each substrate with known concentrations of H2O2.
Quantitative real-time PCR
RNA isolation and analysis was performed as previously described [25]. See the electronic supplementary material (ESM) for further details.
Statistics
Results are expressed as mean ± SEM and were analysed by Student’s t test or two-way repeated measures ANOVA followed by Bonferroni’s post-hoc test where appropriate. Significance was set at p < 0.05. All graphs and statistical analyses were performed using Prism 5.0 (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, CA, USA).
Results
HF feeding for 1 week induces WAT insulin resistance
As anticipated, 1 week of HFD resulted in greater body weight and adipose tissue weight compared with chow-fed controls (Table 1), as well as insulin resistance at the whole-body level (AUC 1.16-fold, p < 0.001) in awake mice (Fig. 1a). Although blood glucose levels were similar between HFD and chow mice (Table 1), serum insulin levels and HOMA-IR were 1.63-fold (Table 1, p < 0.05) and 1.90-fold (Fig. 1b, p < 0.05) higher with the HFD, respectively. Moreover, the ability of an intravenous insulin injection (15 min) to decrease blood glucose levels in anaesthetised animals was severely blunted following the HFD (Fig. 1c). Interestingly, skeletal muscle insulin signalling was preserved after 1 week of the HFD (Fig. 1d). These results are consistent with previous studies showing skeletal muscle insulin resistance does not develop after only 1 week of HFD [26, 27].
Basal HSL phosphorylation, a surrogate marker of WAT lipolysis that is attenuated by insulin signalling, was increased by ∼1.60-fold with the HFD (ESM Fig. 1a), while HFD resulted in a notable reduction in insulin-induced Ser-473 and Thr-308 Akt phosphorylation, particularly in the epididymal depot (Fig. 1e, f). Taken together, 1 week of HFD resulted in WAT-specific insulin resistance.
Overt WAT inflammation is not apparent after 1 week of HFD
To evaluate potential causes of this rapid onset of diet-induced insulin resistance in WAT, we examined WAT inflammation and mitochondrial dysfunction. Histological examination showed no significant change in adipocyte cell size at 1 week on an HFD in either depot (Fig. 2a, b). In addition, F4/80 staining, a marker of macrophage infiltration, was similar between the two diets (Fig. 2c), suggesting no overt macrophage infiltration with short-term HF feeding. In agreement, the protein content of MCP-1, was similar between mice fed chow and those receiving the HFD (Fig. 2d). We also observed no difference between the two diet groups for the metabolic and inflammatory signalling marker ERK1/2 (Fig. 2e, f). Meanwhile, P38-MAPK, which is activated by a plethora of proinflammatory and stress stimuli [28], remained unchanged after 1 week of HFD (ESM Fig. 1b). In contrast, examining the oxidative stress proinflammatory signalling marker JNK revealed increased phosphorylated JNK1 levels in the epididymal depot (Fig. 2g, h). With the exception of JNK, these data, when combined, suggest the absence of a strong inflammatory signal.
Mitochondrial respiratory capacity is not impaired with short-term HFD
As we excluded apparent macrophage infiltration as a putative mechanism causing short-term WAT insulin resistance, we next evaluated if defects within mitochondrial content and function are a potential mechanism of action. The protein content of various electron transport chain subunits was not different in either epididymal (Fig. 3a) or inguinal (Fig. 3b) depots following the HFD. Furthermore, maximal DNP-stimulated mitochondrial respiratory function (data not shown) and ADP-stimulated (state 3) respiration supported by pyruvate (Fig. 3d, f) and lipids (Fig. 3e, g) as substrates were not altered by HFD. Leak respiration (state 4) occurs through uncoupling ATP synthesis from oxidative phosphorylation. Recently, ANT2-mediated uncoupling of mitochondria has been proposed to result in hypoxia, inflammation and WAT insulin resistance [3]. However, in the present study oligomycin-uncoupled respiration (state 4o) was similar between chow- and HF-fed mice for each substrate tested (Fig. 3d–g). Therefore, mitochondrial respiratory dysfunction is not a causal factor regulating JNK phosphorylation or insulin resistance within adipose tissue.
Insulin-resistant epididymal tissue is associated with greater degree of lipid peroxidation
Oxidative stress is known to activate JNK signalling, and therefore we next considered alterations in the redox environment as a potential cause of WAT insulin resistance. HFD increased the lipid peroxidation adduct, 4-HNE, in epididymal tissue (∼1.70-fold, p < 0.05, Fig. 4a). In contrast, 4-HNE content was similar between chow- and HF-fed mice in the inguinal depot (Fig. 4a), and no difference was observed for protein carbonylation (Fig. 4b) in either depot. Similarly, levels of mitochondrial SOD2 (Fig. 4c) and catalase (Fig. 4d) were comparable between chow- and HF-fed mice in both depots. Therefore, short-term HFD-induced insulin resistance is associated with a lipid-specific oxidative stress marker, particularly in epididymal tissue.
Short-term HFD increases lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS emissions
Next, we sought to determine mitochondrial ROS emission rates in WAT as a source of the observed oxidative stress. Therefore, to measure mitochondrial ROS emissions in WAT, we adopted a protocol previously established for permeabilised skeletal muscle fibres [18, 21]. While WAT mitochondrial H2O2 emission rates are lower than skeletal muscle fibres (Fig. 5a), owing to differences in mitochondrial content between the two tissues, WAT mitochondrial ROS emissions react similarly to skeletal muscle. Specifically, in WAT, mitochondrial H2O2 emission rates are increased with excess substrates (e.g. succinate addition) and are dissipated by ∼50–70% in the presence of uncouplers (DNP and exogenous ADP) or complex inhibitors (Fig. 5b–d). Therefore, we further investigated mitochondrial ROS emission rates using several substrates to gain insight into the different electron ‘leakage points’. Mitochondrial ROS emission rates were similar between chow- and HFD-fed mice when supported by pyruvate and malate (Fig. 5e), G3P (Fig. 5f) or succinate (Fig. 5g) in epididymal and inguinal depots. However, mitochondrial ROS emissions increased by 1.33-fold (p < 0.01) and 1.15-fold (p = 0.08) in HFD mice with a lipid-supported substrate in epididymal and inguinal depots, respectively (Fig. 5h). Therefore, HFD-induced adipose tissue insulin resistance may be a consequence of increased lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS emissions.
Transgenic mice with decreased mitochondrial ROS emissions are protected from diet-induced insulin resistance
We next aimed to determine if increased lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS is a causal factor in short-term diet-induced insulin resistance. To accomplish this we used the MCAT mouse model to determine if decreasing mitochondrial ROS prevented the observed acute HFD attenuation in WAT insulin sensitivity. MCAT mice express the human catalase gene within mitochondria and are a model of increased mitochondrial antioxidant enzyme capacity [17]. The original characterisation of these animals did not determine the presence of the transgene in WAT. Here, we demonstrate that human catalase is expressed in WAT of MCAT mice to a similar extent as endogenous mouse catalase (ESM Fig. 2a). Moreover, mitochondrial ROS emissions are reduced by ∼40% in WAT from MCAT compared with WT mice (Fig. 6a), validating the use of MCAT mice as a model to investigate the mechanistic link between increased WAT ROS and insulin resistance.
When placed on an HFD, MCAT mice were protected from increased lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS emissions (Fig. 6b); the lipid oxidative stress marker 4-HNE was not increased (Fig. 6c), contrary to WT HFD mice (Fig. 4a). Furthermore, the consumption of an HFD did not increase mitochondrial succinate-, pyruvate- or G3P-supported ROS emission rates in MCAT mice (data not shown). In addition, whole-body insulin tolerance (ESM Fig. 2b) and both epididymal (Fig. 6d) and inguinal (Fig. 6e) insulin signalling were preserved in MCAT HFD mice.
Finally, JNK phosphorylation was similar between chow and HFD MCAT mice in both depots (Fig. 6f, g), indicating a subdued inflammatory response. Taken together, MCAT mice are protected from the observed HFD-induced activation of JNK signalling and the attenuation of WAT insulin signalling, providing proof of principle that increased mitochondrial ROS has a causal role in the initiation of WAT insulin resistance.
Discussion
In the present study we demonstrated that 1 week of HF feeding increased lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS emissions, lipid-specific oxidative stress and induced insulin resistance in WAT. Moreover, we provide evidence that increased mitochondrial antioxidant capacity, and the associated decreased mitochondrial ROS emission, prevents increased markers of oxidative stress, inflammation and attenuations in insulin signalling in WAT on HF feeding. Taken together, the current data implicate increased mitochondrial ROS emission as an early mechanism inducing WAT insulin resistance.
While low-grade inflammation increases oxidative stress in the obese state [29], the temporal cause-and-effect relationship between inflammation, oxidative stress and insulin resistance remains poorly defined. In the present study, F4/80 immunohistochemical staining, indicating blatant adipose tissue inflammation, was minimal after 1 week of HFD. However, the oxidative-stress-mediated inflammatory signalling response was increased in the visceral depot. This is in line with other studies showing that short-term HFD induces inflammatory response signals [6, 30, 31]. As chronic HFD is associated with increased oxidative stress from excessive mitochondrial ROS emissions in muscle [18, 32], we sought to evaluate the induction of oxidative stress from mitochondrial ROS emissions in WAT after 1 week on an HFD. Unlike JNK phosphorylation, increased lipid-supported mitochondrial H2O2 emission was associated with the development of insulin resistance in both WAT depots studied, suggesting mitochondrial ROS may contribute directly to the establishment of insulin resistance within WAT.
We also measured two markers of oxidative stress, 4-HNE and total protein carbonylation. An aldehyde product of lipid peroxidation, 4-HNE is one of the most abundant aldehydes found in adipose tissue [33]. Although protein carbonylation was similar between the diet groups, after 1 week of HF feeding we observed a significant increase in the visceral adipose depot 4-HNE content, with no change in the subcutaneous depot. This is in agreement with Long et al who also showed depot-specific effects in 4-HNE accumulation: 9 weeks of HFD increased 4-HNE content five-fold in epididymal tissue, but 4-HNE was decreased in the subcutaneous depot [33]. It has been shown that 4-HNE can directly interfere with insulin signalling, as exogenous exposure of cultured adipocytes to 4-HNE results in reduced IRS-1 content and phosphorylation [34]. More recently, 4-HNE was shown to inhibit Akt activity and insulin signalling downstream of Akt in hepatocytes [35]; however, this has not yet been evaluated in adipocytes. Nonetheless, it is tempting to speculate that, in the current study, the increased 4-HNE levels within epididymal adipose tissue, in addition to the possible direct effects of H2O2, contributed to the exaggerated impairment in insulin signalling observed in this depot.
To explore the underlying mechanism causing rapid HFD-induced insulin resistance, we used the MCAT mouse, a model of upregulated mitochondrial antioxidant enzyme capacity. Catalase is the enzyme that converts reactive H2O2 into H2O, and therefore MCAT mice can quench mitochondrial ROS emissions in situ, thus alleviating excessive ROS emissions and eliminating overt oxidative stress. This model has been previously employed to investigate the role of oxidative stress in age-related cardiomyopathy [17]. More recently, MCAT mice were shown to be protected against age- [19] and HFD- [18] induced insulin resistance in skeletal muscle. Specifically, improved insulin sensitivity in MCAT mice was associated with blunted skeletal muscle mitochondrial ROS emissions and reduced oxidative stress [18, 19].
Here, we demonstrated that the human catalase gene is expressed in the WAT of MCAT mice, and is associated with attenuated mitochondrial ROS emission. Moreover, we showed that insulin signalling within WAT was preserved with 1 week of HFD in MCAT mice while lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS emissions, lipid peroxidation and inflammatory signalling were normalised, suggesting excess ROS is the principal mechanism in adipose tissue dysfunction. These findings are in agreement with those of Pires et al who demonstrated that ROS sequestering through the administration of a SOD mimetic reduced WAT inflammation with 5 weeks of HFD [36]. Therefore, mitochondrial ROS emissions are a potential early causal factor in diet-induced insulin resistance in WAT. More recently, Asterholm et al demonstrated the requirement of an acute inflammatory response to facilitate adipogenesis and remodelling under an HF challenge [37]. In the context of the current data, HFD-induced increases in mitochondrial ROS are implicated in these events, though this remains to be shown directly. In this manner, mitochondrial ROS may represent a sensitive barometer of excess fuel in WAT and induce gene transcriptional programmes that result in adipogenesis.
To our knowledge the present study is the first to examine mitochondrial ROS emission in permeabilised WAT in the context of diet-induced insulin resistance. While previous studies have evaluated ROS emissions in cultured cell systems or isolated adipocytes [38–40], the advantage of permeabilised WAT over these traditional methods is the ability to assess adipocyte function within its cellular milieu. Approximately 25% of WAT is composed of adipocytes, the remaining cell population is made up of the stromal vascular cells (SVC), including macrophages [41]. SVC are integral members of WAT contributing to function of the organ, and while our method does not discriminate between the sources of mitochondrion (for example, macrophage vs adipocyte), we can evaluate how WAT, as a whole tissue, responds to various substrates. Importantly, the MCAT mice clearly delineate a functional role for mitochondrially derived ROS in the induction of insulin resistance within WAT.
We examined four key electron ‘leakage’ sites of mitochondrial ROS production through the use of different substrates. Mitochondrial ROS emissions from complex I and III, caused by electron leakage, increase on building of membrane potential, which can occur under conditions of high substrate availability. Meanwhile, mitochondrial ROS emissions derived from G3P dehydrogenase (GPDH) or the electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) have been proposed to be independent of membrane potential [42, 43]. In brown adipose tissue, GPDH is highly prone to electron leakage, resulting in high rates of ROS emissions [44]. However, in WAT we demonstrated that G3P-supported emission rates were fairly low, possibly because of differences in mitochondrial content between brown adipose tissue and WAT. Interestingly, contrary to skeletal muscle, in WAT the rates of succinate-supported ROS emissions were lower than those of pyruvate- or lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS emissions. This is likely due to forward electron flow owing to residual endogenous substrates not washed away in our permeabilised preparation. While we did not fully explore ROS emission topology in the present study, we observed the highest emission rates with a lipid substrate. In skeletal muscle, Seifert et al demonstrated that ROS production at the ETF occurs at a wide range of physiological concentrations [43], consequentially leading to adverse effects, especially in the context of high lipid availability. In this regard, 1 week of HFD did not change pyruvate-, succinate- or G3P-supported mitochondrial ROS rates, yet lipid-supported ROS rates were significantly elevated in epididymal tissue, with a strong trend to increase in the inguinal depot. Recently, it was suggested that acute HFD-induced mitochondrial uncoupling, and the resulting increase in WAT oxygen consumption, can propagate a hypoxic environment leading to insulin-resistant conditions [3]. While mitochondrial uncoupling would dissipate ROS emissions, we seemingly observed contrary findings that HFD promoted mitochondrial ROS emissions and increased oxidative stress. Furthermore, mitochondrial ROS emissions were specific to a lipid-supported substrate, which can generate ROS emissions independent of membrane potential [43]. Taken together, these data suggest that lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS emission increased oxidative stress resulting in insulin resistance, specifically within the visceral depot.
In summary, we have assessed the role of diet-induced oxidative stress and mitochondrial ROS emissions in WAT after 1 week of HF feeding. We found that marked lipid-supported mitochondrial ROS emissions were associated with an increase in lipid peroxidation, elevated inflammatory signalling and impaired insulin signalling, which were abolished in MCAT mice. Therefore, we propose that elevated mitochondrial ROS emission observed after 1 week of a HFD is a causal factor of WAT insulin resistance which contributes to altered whole-body glucose homeostasis.
Abbreviations
- ANT:
-
Adenine nucleotide translocase
- DNP:
-
2,4-Dinitrophenol
- ERK:
-
Extracellular signalling-related kinase
- ETF:
-
Electron transfer flavoprotein
- G3P:
-
Glycerol 3-phosphate
- GPDH:
-
G3P dehydrogenase
- HF(D):
-
High-fat (diet)
- 4-HNE:
-
trans-4-Hydroxy-2-nonenal
- HSL:
-
Hormone-sensitive lipase
- ITT:
-
Insulin tolerance test
- JNK:
-
c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase
- MAPK:
-
Mitogen-activated protein kinase
- MCAT:
-
Transgenic mice that express human catalase in mitochondria
- MCP-1:
-
Monocyte chemoattractant protein 1
- OXPHOS:
-
Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation
- ROS:
-
Reactive oxygen species
- SOD:
-
Superoxide dismutase
- SVC:
-
Stromal vascular cells
- WAT:
-
White adipose tissue
- WT:
-
Wild-type
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Acknowledgements
We would like to thank D. C. Wright (University of Guelph) for generously providing some of the antibodies used in this study.
Funding
This work was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC; GPH). Infrastructure was purchased with the assistance of the Canadian Foundation for Innovation (GPH) as well as the Ontario Research Fund (GPH).
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The authors declare that there is no duality of interest associated with this manuscript.
Contribution statement
SP designed the study, researched and interpreted data, and wrote the manuscript. AL and JR-M researched data, interpreted data and edited the manuscript. GPH designed the study, contributed to writing the manuscript and is the guarantor of this study. All authors have approved the final version of the manuscript.
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Paglialunga, S., Ludzki, A., Root-McCaig, J. et al. In adipose tissue, increased mitochondrial emission of reactive oxygen species is important for short-term high-fat diet-induced insulin resistance in mice. Diabetologia 58, 1071–1080 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-015-3531-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-015-3531-x