Recombinant Human FIZZ3/Resistin Stimulates Lipolysis in Cultured Human Adipocytes, Mouse Adipose Explants, and Normal Mice
Glycerol
0303 health sciences
Esterification
Lipolysis
Fatty Acids
Cell Differentiation
In Vitro Techniques
Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases
Recombinant Proteins
3. Good health
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
Glucose
Proto-Oncogene Proteins
Hormones, Ectopic
Adipocytes
Animals
Humans
Insulin
Phosphorylation
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt
Cell Division
Cells, Cultured
DOI:
10.1210/en.2004-1421
Publication Date:
2005-02-11T01:25:55Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
Human FIZZ3 (hFIZZ3) was identified as an ortholog of mouse resistin (mResistin), an adipocyte-specific secreted factor linked to insulin resistance in rodents. Unlike mResistin, hFIZZ3 is expressed in macrophages and monocytes, but is undetectable in adipose tissue. The profound macrophage infiltration of adipose that occurs during obesity suggests that hFIZZ3 may play an important role in adipocyte biology. Using a recombinant protein produced in Escherichia coli, we report here that chronic treatment of cultured human adipocytes with hFIZZ3 results in hypotropic cells with smaller lipid droplets. Recombinant hFIZZ3 facilitates preadipocyte proliferation and stimulates adipocyte triglyceride lipolysis, whereas recombinant mResistin inhibits adipocyte differentiation, with no detectable effect on proliferation or lipolysis. In addition, insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and Akt phosphorylation are not altered in hFIZZ3-treated adipocytes, indicating an intact insulin response. In mouse adipose explants, hFIZZ3 accelerates simultaneously triglyceride lipolysis and fatty acid reesterification, as assessed by measurement of glycerol and fatty acid release. Consistent with the in vitro findings, acute administration of recombinant hFIZZ3 into normal mice caused a significant increase in serum glycerol concentration with no elevation in free fatty acid at 45 min post injection. Taken together, the data suggest that recombinant hFIZZ3 can influence adipose metabolism by regulating preadipocyte cell number, adipocyte lipid content, and energy expenditure via accelerating the fatty acid/triglyceride futile cycle.
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