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Dietary lipid is largely deposited in skin and rapidly affects insulating properties.

Authors :
Riley N
Kasza I
Barrett-Wilt G
Michaud J
Jain R
Trautman ME
Simcox JA
Yen CE
MacDougald OA
Lamming DW
Alexander CM
Source :
Research square [Res Sq] 2024 Feb 22. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Feb 22.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Skin has been shown to be a regulatory hub for energy expenditure and metabolism: mutations of skin lipid metabolism enzymes can change the rate of thermogenesis and susceptibility to diet-induced obesity. However, little is known about the physiological basis for this function. Here we show that the thermal properties of skin are highly reactive to diet: within three days, a high fat diet reduces heat transfer through skin. In contrast, a dietary manipulation that prevents obesity accelerates energy loss through skins. We found that skin was the largest target in a mouse body for dietary fat delivery, and that fat was assimilated both by epidermis and by dermal white adipose tissue. Dietary triglyceride acyl groups persist in skin for weeks after feeding. Using multi-modal lipid profiling, we have implicated both keratinocytes and sebocytes in the altered lipids which correlate with thermal function. In response to high fat feeding, wax diesters and ceramides accumulate, and triglycerides become more saturated. In contrast, in response to the dramatic loss of adipose tissue that accompanies restriction of the branched chain amino acid isoleucine, skin becomes highly heat-permeable: skins shows limited uptake of dietary lipids and editing of wax esters, and acquires a signature of depleted signaling lipids, which include the acyl carnitines and lipid ethers. We propose that skin should be routinely included in physiological studies of lipid metabolism, given the size of the skin lipid reservoir and its adaptable functionality.<br />Competing Interests: DWL has received funding from, and is a scientific advisory board member of, Aeovian Pharmaceuticals, which seeks to develop novel, selective mTOR inhibitors for the treatment of various diseases.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Research square
Accession number :
38464106
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3957002/v1