Impact of the metabolic disease status in obesity and surgical weight loss on human adipose tissue bioenergetics.

IF 4.7 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES
Aryane Cruz Oliveira Pinho, André Lazaro, Pedro Barbosa, Craig Porter, José G Tralhão, Eugenia Carvalho
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Obesity is associated with insulin resistance (IR) development, a risk factor for type 2 diabetes (T2D). How mitochondrial bioenergetics, in adipose tissue (AT), differs according to distinct metabolic profiles (i.e. insulin sensitive (IS), IR normoglycaemic (IR-NG), pre-diabetes (PD) and T2D) is still poorly understood. The purpose of this study was to evaluate and compare bioenergetics and energy substrate preference by omental AT (OAT) and subcutaneous AT (SAT) from subjects with obesity (OB, n = 40) at distinct metabolic stages. Furthermore, AT bioenergetics was also evaluated pre- and post-bariatric/metabolic surgery (BMS). High-resolution respirometry (HRR) was used to measure the real-time oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) capacity and mitochondrial substrate preferences in both tissues. Substrate-uncoupler-inhibitor titration protocols were used: SUIT-P1 (complex I and II-linked mitochondrial respiration) and SUIT-P2 (fatty acid oxidation (FAO)-linked mitochondrial respiration). Flux control ratios (FCRs) were calculated. In SUIT-P1, lower OXPHOS capacity was observed in AT, particularly in SAT, during the establishment of IR (OB-IR-NG) and in the T2D group, due to alterations of mitochondrial coupling, evaluated by FCRs. In SUIT-P2, the OXPHOS coupling efficiency was highest in the OB-IR-NG group. AT from OB-IS, OB-IR-NG and OB-IR-PD preferred pyruvate, malate and glutamate oxidation and/or FAO during OXPHOS, whereas AT from T2D preferred succinate oxidation. BMS enhanced mitochondrial respiration in OAT, even under poor OXPHOS coupling efficiency. In conclusion, real-time OXPHOS analysis by HRR may be a sensitive biomarker of mitochondrial fitness, particularly in AT. Interventions based on modulating energetic substrate availability may become a good tool for obesity treatment stratification. KEY POINTS: Omental adipose tissue shows higher oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) capacity compared to subcutaneous adipose tissue in paired explants from subjects with obesity. The OXPHOS capacity of adipose tissue differs through the progression of metabolic disease. Subjects with obesity and diabetes have the lowest OXPHOS capacity in paired explants of subcutaneous and omental adipose tissues. Bariatric surgery enhanced the OXPHOS capacity in omental adipose tissue, even under poor OXPHOS coupling efficiency. Assessment of the oxidative capacity in fresh adipose tissue explants could be a sensitive tool for early diagnosis of metabolic disease.

肥胖症和手术减肥中的代谢疾病状态对人体脂肪组织生物能的影响。
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来源期刊
Journal of Physiology-London
Journal of Physiology-London 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
9.70
自引率
7.30%
发文量
817
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Physiology publishes full-length original Research Papers and Techniques for Physiology, which are short papers aimed at disseminating new techniques for physiological research. Articles solicited by the Editorial Board include Perspectives, Symposium Reports and Topical Reviews, which highlight areas of special physiological interest. CrossTalk articles are short editorial-style invited articles framing a debate between experts in the field on controversial topics. Letters to the Editor and Journal Club articles are also published. All categories of papers are subjected to peer reivew. The Journal of Physiology welcomes submitted research papers in all areas of physiology. Authors should present original work that illustrates new physiological principles or mechanisms. Papers on work at the molecular level, at the level of the cell membrane, single cells, tissues or organs and on systems physiology are all acceptable. Theoretical papers and papers that use computational models to further our understanding of physiological processes will be considered if based on experimentally derived data and if the hypothesis advanced is directly amenable to experimental testing. While emphasis is on human and mammalian physiology, work on lower vertebrate or invertebrate preparations may be suitable if it furthers the understanding of the functioning of other organisms including mammals.
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