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Weight Regain in Formerly Obese Mice Hastens Development of Hepatic Steatosis Due to Impaired Adipose Tissue Function

Authors :
Hannah R. Lucas
Jennifer L. DelProposto
Danny Luan
Taleen Mergian
Kae Won Cho
Lindsey A. Muir
Carey N. Lumeng
Lynn M. Geletka
Cara E. Porsche
Gabriel Martinez-Santibanez
Kanakadurga Singer
Brian F. Zamarron
Source :
Obesity (Silver Spring)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Objective Weight regain after weight loss is common, and there is evidence to suggest negative effects on health because of weight cycling. This study sought to investigate the impact of weight regain in formerly obese mice on adipose tissue architecture and stromal cell function. Methods A diet-switch model was employed for obesity induction, weight loss, and weight regain in mice. Flow cytometry quantified adipose tissue leukocytes in adipose tissue. Liver and adipose tissue depots were compared to determine tissue-specific effects of weight cycling. Results Epididymal white adipose tissue of formerly obese mice failed to expand in response to repeat exposure to high-fat diet and retained elevated numbers of macrophages and T cells. Weight regain was associated with disproportionally elevated liver mass, hepatic triglyceride content, serum insulin concentration, and serum transaminase concentration. These effects occurred despite an extended 6-month weight loss cycle and they demonstrate that formerly obese mice maintain durable alterations in their physiological response to weight regain. Conditioned media from epididymal adipose tissue of formerly obese mice inhibited adipogenesis of 3T3-L1 preadipocytes, suggesting a potential mechanism to explain failed epididymal adipose tissue expansion during weight regain. Conclusions Metabolic abnormalities related to defects in adipose tissue expansion and ongoing dysfunction manifest in formerly obese mice during weight regain.

Details

ISSN :
1930739X and 19307381
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obesity
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e277d6d498c8ef9e5f25529cf895ce35
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/oby.22788