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Figure 4-3. A simplified schematic of the hypothalamic feeding center and its primary afferent signals. A. Multiple hormones
secreted by the gastrointestinal tract and adipose tissue act as afferent signals that impact on the arcuate nucleus (ArcN) within the
hypothalamic feeding center to regulate feeding behavior. B. Peripheral afferent signals impact on first-order ArcN neurons, which
in turn communicate with second-order paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) neurons to coordinate
behavioral and metabolic output. PVN signaling is primarily anorexigenic and catabolic, and is enhanced by leptin and insulin,
while LHA signaling is primarily orexigenic and anabolic and inhibited by leptin and insulin. Higher-order anorexigenic PVN
outputs include corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), oxytocin, and thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH); higher-order
orexigenic LHA outputs include melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) and orexins A and B. Both pathways negatively regulate
the other. Other peripheral and central mediators stimulate first- and second-order neurons as well, including ghrelin, CCK, GLP-1,
serotonin, endogenous cannabinoids, and norepinephrine.
Adipocyte physiology: Adipocytes arise from mesenchyme-derived adipocyte stem cells within adipose
tissue. Nomenclature is evolving and includes the terms preadipocyte or adipocyte/adipose tissue stem cell.
Adipocyte stem cells are pluripotent, and depending on the stage of differentiation, may give rise to
adipocytes, fibroblast, myocytes, and other cell types. Multiple adipocyte stem cell subpopulations give
rise to adipocytes of variable phenotypes, including white, brown, and beige. Evidence suggests that
hematopoietic precursor cells may also give rise to adipocytes.
Until recently it was thought that adipocyte stem cell proliferation, that is, hyperplasia, did not occur
in postnatal humans, and that adipocyte hypertrophy was the primary mechanism of increased adipose
tissue mass in obesity. Recent data suggest that both hyperplasia and hypertrophy contribute to
evolving obesity, with hyperplasia predominating during childhood and hypertrophy predominating
during adulthood. These data derive in part from ingenious methods studying incorporation of C14 into
adipocyte DNA in individuals born before and after mid-20th century nuclear bomb testing, which raised
environmental C14 levels.12 Data over the last decade have demonstrated that adipocyte hyperplasia
and proliferation are highly regulated and that aberrations in these processes contribute to obesity.
Adipocyte necrosis and apoptosis as a result of hypoxia and nutrient excess (described below) are
matched by increased adipocyte stem cell proliferation and differentiation. Furthermore, adipocytes
from obese humans demonstrate increased hyperplastic and hypertrophic capacities, contributing to
increased adipose tissue mass with progressive obesity.13 The epigenetic programming of adipocyte
stem cells during fetal development may underlie some of these differences in adipocyte behavior
observed between obese and lean subjects. Defining regulatory mechanisms of adipocyte growth is an
active area of research and will lead to methods to manipulate adipocyte biology and treat obesity at its
source.
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Figure 4-4. Primary peptide mediators of energy homeostasis. Cytokines, adipokines, and gut peptides regulate diverse aspects of
metabolism to control global energy homeostasis. Each of these proteins has dominant functions within its primary family, but also
demonstrates cross-regulatory functions in other domains. In addition, mediators participate in crosstalk at the level of cellular
receptors and downstream intracellular signaling mediators. Shown are only partial lists of peptides and the physiologic functions
they control.
The microbiome: In a very real sense, the microbiome may be considered a distinct organ system much
like cardiopulmonary, gastrointestinal, or renal systems, and like any organ system, aberrations in the
microbiome contribute to the pathophysiology of disease. The microbiome plays an important role in
energy homeostasis. Animals raised in germ-free environments manifest increased food intake but
decreased body weight and do not develop obesity and insulin resistance when fed a high-fat diet,
demonstrating that gut microbiota contribute to nutrient digestion. Gut microbiota ferment nonhostdigestible polysaccharides into absorbable monosaccharides and short-chain fatty acids that are absorbed
by host enterocytes and colonocytes. Products of microbiota fermentation act not only as nutrients, but
also regulate host metabolism: short-chain fatty acids induce host satiety, mediated in part by increased
secretion of GLP-1 and peptide YY and decreased secretion of ghrelin. Separate data demonstrate
interactions between microbiota and adipose tissue, liver, skeletal muscle, and CNS. These effects are
mediated by short-chain fatty acids, activation of Toll-like receptors on host cells via lipopolysaccharide
and other bacterial products, regulation of host systemic and cellular metabolism, and other diverse
mechanisms, all of which affect diverse aspects of host energy homeostasis.
Alterations in microbiome–host interactions contribute to the pathogenesis of obesity and metabolic
disease. Germ-free mice, when colonized with stool from obese mice, gain more weight than mice
colonized with stool from lean mice, demonstrating an obesity-specific microbiome. The ratio of gut
Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes species is increased in obese mice and humans. Ongoing research has begun to
identify specific subspecies within these broad categories of bacteria that are altered in obesity and
metabolic disease to provide a higher-resolution picture of the microbiome in obesity. For example,
obesity in mice and humans is associated with an increase in gram-negative gut bacteria, with a
concomitant increase in lipopolysaccharide absorption from the gut, which has been postulated to
contribute to obesity-associated inflammation and insulin resistance. The tools used to evaluate the
microbiome are rapidly evolving. Sequencing of the microbial genome using ribosomal 16S is well
established, while evolving technologies include shotgun sequencing of the entire metagenome and
functional assays involving transfer of human microbiota in the form of stool into germ-free animals to
study in vivo effects. Manipulation of the microbiome holds significant promise. Prebiotic
(nondigestible bacterial nutrients) and probiotic (specific bacterial subspecies thought to confer systemic
benefits) therapies are areas of active research, while antibiotic therapy directed against gram-negative
bacteria reduces steatosis and systemic inflammation in obese rodents.
Summary: Satiety and hunger, metabolic rate, adipocyte physiology, and the microbiome are but a
few of the many processes that regulate metabolism and are dysregulated in obesity. Differences in lipid
and glucose metabolism, immune function, central and peripheral nervous system function, and multiple
other processes that impact upon energy metabolism contribute to the wide variability of the obesity
phenotype in humans. This variability is the result of genetic polymorphisms that contribute to
metabolic diversity among humans and the wide range in human body habitus. The question is often
posed as to whether obesity should be considered a disease. Rather, obesity is better thought of as a
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maladaptive compensatory response to an environment that is radically different than that in which our
species evolved. The obesity phenotype remained relatively underexpressed in environments of food
scarcity in which we evolved, in which obesogenic genes acted to defend adipose tissue stores and
enhance survival, but blossoms in our modern environment. An understanding of this intimate interplay
between phenotype and environment will lead to novel therapy for obesity based on manipulation of
environment and genetics.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF METABOLIC DISEASE
Obesity and metabolic disease: Obesity is associated with a range of pathology involving every organ
system collectively referred to as metabolic disease. While underlying mechanisms are multiple, the
root cause of all metabolic disease is a failure of adipose tissue nutrient buffering capacity, leading to
overflow of nutrients, metabolites, cytokines, and adipokines from adipose tissue to other tissues. The
clinical effects of overflow differ depending on the target tissue, but the fundamental cellular responses
to nutrient excess common to all tissues, adipose included, involve mechanisms by which cells control
nutrient flux and respond to nutrient excess. These cellular responses underlie the pathophysiology of
metabolic disease.
5 Metabolism, nutrient excess, and the root cause of metabolic disease: Energy homeostasis is the
dominant and overriding goal of all biologic systems. Metabolism (Gr. metabole, change) may be
defined as the sum total of all chemical reactions and physiologic processes that regulate cellular and
systemic energy homeostasis. At the cellular level, metabolic processes are fundamental to all metazoan
life and are highly conserved across phyla; examples include the citric acid cycle and mitochondrial
respiration, which utilize multiple enzymes, the structure and function of which are conserved from
yeast to humans. At the systemic level, metabolic processes are central to maintaining homeostasis and
interface with virtually with every organ system and every physiologic process. The basic substrates of
metabolism are the macro- and micronutrients that comprise the stuff of cells and tissues, the fatty
acids, amino acids, and carbohydrates and their derivatives that are the constituents of complex
macromolecules, and the micronutrients that contribute to the catalysis of reactions that synthesize and
degrade macronutrients and higher-order macromolecules. In one sense, all cells are simply
clearinghouses for nutrients. Cellular nutrient flux provides substrate for synthesis of macromolecules
via anabolic metabolic processes, which are in turn degraded via catabolic metabolic processes.
Maintaining the balance between anabolism and catabolism at cellular and systemic levels is of critical
importance. Cancer, for example, may be viewed as a metabolic imbalance that favors cellular
anabolism over catabolism. Cachexia, in contrast, may be considered as a metabolic disorder that favors
systemic catabolism over anabolism.
The nutrient flux with which cells are constantly faced determines the balance between anabolism and
catabolism and dictates organism-wide energy homeostasis. Nutrients are, by their very nature, highenergy capacity molecules, much like oxygen, and like oxygen, are capable of participating in energyintensive and potentially damaging reactions. Fatty acid metabolites such as ceramides and
diacylglycerols, and glucose metabolites including advanced glycation end products and glucosamines,
trigger inflammation, oxidative stress, and insulin resistance at the cellular level.
Excess nutrients are therefore potentially damaging to cells, and cellular physiology has evolved
processes designed to control exposure, flux, and sequestering of these high-energy molecules. These
cellular processes were selected by evolution to manage transient nutrient excess, but are not well
adapted to manage chronic nutrient excess, a situation that cells only rarely encountered during
evolution. Maladaptive cellular responses to chronic nutrient excess underlie the pathogenesis of all
obesity-related disease and occur in all cells, explaining the involvement of virtually every organ system
in metabolic disease. These processes consist of a triumvirate of fundamental cellular stress responses:
endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, oxidative stress, and inflammation.
Cellular responses to excess nutrient flux: The ER is a complex organelle present in virtually all
eukaryotic cells that orchestrates synthesis, folding, and intracellular transport of macromolecules. The
rough ER, studded with ribosomes, is predominantly responsible for protein synthesis, while the smooth
ER is predominantly responsible for lipid and carbohydrate synthesis. The ER receives a constant influx
of nutrient substrates, which it sequesters and directs toward macromolecule synthesis or degradation,
thus carefully metering cellular nutrient exposure. In this capacity, the ER acts as a nutrient sensor,
responding to changes in cellular nutrient flux by directing cellular anabolism and catabolism
accordingly. The ER also responds to other cell stressors, including hypoxia, toxins, disturbances in
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electrolyte or micronutrient balance, and a host of other stimuli that alter cell homeostasis. Excess
cellular nutrient flux, like other forms of stress, leads to a series of stepwise ER responses that are
collectively referred to as the ER stress response.
The initial ER stress response to modest increases in nutrient flux involves increased expression of
chaperone proteins involved in macromolecule synthesis to accommodate increased anabolism of excess
nutrients. If nutrient excess persists to exceed the capacity of cellular macromolecule synthesis and
nutrient sequestration, the ER stress response progresses to activate the unfolded protein response. The
unfolded protein response downregulates global protein expression while upregulating expression of
chaperone proteins in an adaptive response designed to maintain synthesis of essential cellular proteins.
If nutrient excess persists beyond the capacity of the ER to maintain proper protein synthesis, then the
unfolded protein response progresses to induce cell apoptosis. The unfolded protein response thus
protects cells from modest increases in nutrient flux and induces cell death in the face of extreme
nutrient excess.
The ER stress response is not the only cellular response to nutrient excess. Macromolecule synthesis
generates reactive oxygen species (e.g., superoxides, oxygen/hydroxyl-free radicals, hydrogen peroxide)
which, like nutrients, are highly energetic molecules capable of damaging cells. Cells have evolved
multiple mechanisms to sequester reactive oxygen species and manage oxidative stress, including
antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase, and catalase, scavenging
molecules such as ascorbic acid, urate, and divalent ions, and the thioredoxin and glutaredoxin systems.
The ER and mitochondria are primary cellular sites of control of oxidative stress. When nutrient flux,
macromolecule synthesis, and reactive oxygen species production exceed cellular antioxidant capacity,
cells activate diverse oxidative stress responses, which increase expression of antioxidant proteins,
sequester reactive oxygen species, and increase mitochondrial uncoupling, which transiently reduces
cellular reactive oxygen species production. Oxidative stress responses overlap with ER stress responses,
and if oxidative stress persists, the unfolded protein response is activated and leads to apoptosis.
The third arm of the cellular stress response is inflammation. Increased nutrient flux generates an
inflammatory response designed to scavenge debris and byproducts from increased cell turnover and
macromolecule synthesis that result from ER and oxidative stress responses. Testament to the close
relationship between metabolism and inflammation, central inflammatory and metabolic mediators
demonstrate marked functional overlap. For example, TNF-α and leptin, in addition to their dominant
functions in regulating inflammation and satiety respectively, each plays important reciprocal roles in
regulating body weight and inflammation.14,15 TNF-α and leptin are but two examples of many satiety
and hunger factors and inflammatory cytokines that manifest dual immunoregulatory and energy
homeostasis functions. In addition, molecular byproducts of metabolism trigger inflammation. Free fatty
acids are ligands for Toll-like receptors, while advanced glycation end products trigger receptors of
advanced glycation end-products pathways which directly activate innate immune effector cells,
establishing a direct molecular link between metabolism and inflammation. Obesity is associated with a
state of chronic systemic inflammation that plays a central role in the pathogenesis of multiple
comorbid diseases. Serum cytokine levels are increased in obese animals and humans, and adipose tissue
manifests a pan-leukocyte infiltrate, findings that directly correlate with the magnitude of obesity and
severity of metabolic disease.
Increased ER stress, oxidative stress, and inflammation have been demonstrated in obese rodents and
humans. An important aspect of cellular stress responses is that each potentiates the others via overlap
in fundamental cell signaling pathways including PI3-Akt, MAPK, AMPK, mTOR, JAK-STAT, and NFκB.
These signaling pathways are triggered by multiple stimuli that are dysregulated in obesity, including
adipokines, cytokines, growth factors, and nutrients and metabolites. Furthermore these signaling
pathways participate in robust crosstalk at multiple levels, establishing a vicious cycle that perpetuates
cell stress in the face of chronic nutrient excess (Fig. 4-5). These processes are common to all cells and
affect all tissues in late-stage obesity, explaining the diverse manifestations of systemic metabolic
disease. But where do these processes begin, and what initiates them? To answer this question, we must
explore the early events in adipose tissue in evolving overweight and obesity – it is within adipose
tissue that metabolic disease originates.
Adipocyte hypertrophy, hypoxia, inflammation, and fibrosis: Adipocytes are exquisitely well designed to
manage high levels of nutrients. One of the first responses of adipocytes to chronic elevations in
nutrient flux in early overweight and obesity is hypertrophy. Free fatty acids are absorbed by
adipocytes through pinocytosis mediated by fatty acid-binding proteins, as well as being synthesized
from glucose and glutamine via de novo lipogenesis, and stored in lipid droplets via a highly regulated
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process mediated by perilipin proteins. Virtually all cells are capable of storing lipid to some degree, but
adipocytes have an extremely high capacity for lipid storage and hypertrophy. Adipocytes are one of
only a few cell types that can enlarge to diameters greater than 100 microns, the diffusion distance of
oxygen. Adipocyte diameter in humans correlates directly with the magnitude of obesity and the
severity of metabolic disease; adipocytes in lean subjects are virtually all less than 100 microns in
diameter, while those in obese subjects are greater than 100 microns, in some cases exceeding 200
microns.16 Progressive adipocyte hypertrophy establishes a state of cellular hypoxia within adipose
tissue that has been verified in obese mice and humans. Decreased adipose tissue capillary density and
blood flow in obesity exacerbate hypoxia. This hypoxic state has broad effects on adipocyte metabolism,
inducing insulin resistance, ER stress, oxidative stress, and inflammation, and inhibiting lipogenesis.
Manipulation of hypoxic responses in adipocytes holds therapeutic promise. For example, targeting
hypoxia-inducible factor-1α, a dominant cellular hypoxia-response protein, in murine obesity
ameliorates metabolic disease.17
Hypoxia induces adipocyte apoptosis and necrosis which in turn recruits an inflammatory response
designed to scavenge dead and dying adipocytes. This inflammatory state is a dominant aspect of
adipose tissue dysfunction in obesity, and is directly linked to insulin resistance and dysregulation of
lipid metabolism at local (adipose tissue) and systemic levels. Central to adipose tissue inflammation is
a marked accumulation of adipose tissue macrophages (ATMs), the number of which directly correlates
with the degree of obesity in mice and humans. ATMs are important mediators of metabolic disease,
and are altered in phenotype, shifting from a scavenging M2 phenotype to an inflammatory
diabetogenic M1 phenotype.18 ATMs are a dominant source of inflammatory cytokines, including TNFα, IL-6, and IL-1, all of which induce insulin resistance and aberrations in glucose and lipid metabolism
in adipocytes via multiple mechanisms. In support of a central role for ATMs in the pathogenesis of
metabolic disease, mice transgenically engineered to lack macrophage homing molecules in adipose
tissue do not develop obesity-related ATM infiltrates and are protected from diabetes. Preliminary trials
of pharmacologic agents that interfere with macrophage homing to adipose tissue in humans show
promise as treatment for diabetes. Finally, adipose tissue inflammation in obesity involves more than
macrophages, and is associated with a pan-leukocyte infiltrate that includes T-cells, B-cells, NK cells,
NKT cells, and eosinophils. Therapy for metabolic disease based on nonmacrophage cellular immune
mediators is an area of active research.
Figure 4-5. Highly simplified schematic of major cell signaling pathways that regulate energy homeostasis and cell stress
responses. Primary stimuli for all cells include adipokines, insulin, IGF-1, nutrients and metabolites including free fatty acids, and
their derivatives such as ceramide (which activate Toll-like receptors, TLR), glucose, fructose, and advanced glycation end products
(which activate receptors for advanced glycation end products, RAGE), and cytokines. Primary intracellular signaling nexi include
mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK), PI3-Akt, JAK/STAT signaling mediators, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK),
mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), and NFκB, all of which are linked to ER stress and oxidative stress responses. These
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pathways engage in highly redundant crosstalk via cross-reactivity of intracellular signaling mediators and induction of gene
transcription, and conspire to integrate multiple stimuli to regulate fundamental aspects of cell metabolism, survival, and death in
response to nutrient availability and cell stressors such as hypoxia.
6 As inflammation persists, adipose tissue undergoes fibrotic remodeling, with increased expression of
matrix metalloproteases and collagens and increased extracellular matrix turnover. Adipose tissue
fibrosis limits adipocyte hypertrophic and lipid storage capacity, accelerating adipocyte stress. Obese
collagen VI knockout mice demonstrate increased adipocyte hypertrophic capacity due to decreased
fibrosis and are protected from systemic metabolic disease.19 These observations speak to a critically
important role for adipose tissue as a buffer for excess nutrients, metabolites, and metabolic toxins. As
obesity progresses, adipose tissue buffering capacity is overwhelmed and cell stress responses, initially
confined to adipose tissue, overflow into circulation and cause systemic metabolic disease (Fig. 4-6).
Adipose tissue anatomy, adipose tissue overflow, and the pathogenesis of systemic metabolic disease: Patients
with rare congenital and acquired lipodystrophy syndromes characterized by a paucity of adipose tissue
suffer from metabolic disease just as in obesity, including insulin resistance, hyperlipidemia, and hepatic
steatosis, demonstrating that the absence of adipose tissue is as detrimental as its excess. In
lipodystrophy and obesity, adipose tissue nutrient buffering capacity is overwhelmed, and nutrients
overflow to other tissues not as well adapted as adipose tissue to manage nutrient excess, inducing
systemic metabolic disease.
Adipocytes are present throughout the mammalian body in discrete anatomic depots as well as within
every organ and every tissue. Adipose tissue is more than simply a storage depot for lipid; only half the
cells in adipose tissue are adipocytes, the remainder comprising the so-called stromovascular cell
fraction, which consists of immune leukocytes, fibroblasts, endothelial cells, adipocyte stem cells, and
other cell types. Adipose tissue is highly innervated with sympathetic and parasympathetic afferent and
efferent fibers, and has important immunoregulatory and endocrine functions. Adipose tissue
participates in robust communication with the CNS and all peripheral organs, orchestrating responses to
alterations in nutrient availability, systemic health and metabolism, ambient temperature, and a host of
other stimuli. Adipose tissue is a central regulator of systemic energy homeostasis.
Hibernating bears accumulate large amounts of adipose tissue without developing inflammation or
other cellular stress responses, while in some humans, excess subcutaneous adipose tissue appears to
protect against metabolic disease. These examples demonstrate that adipose tissue phenotype is as
important as quantity with respect to systemic metabolic state. Adipose tissue may be broadly divided
into white and brown phenotypes. White adipose tissue comprises the majority of adipose tissue in
humans, is strongly associated with metabolic disease, increases with increasing obesity, and is a
primary storage site for lipid. Brown adipose tissue, in contrast, comprises a minority of total adipose
tissue in humans, has beneficial effects on metabolism, decreases with increasing obesity and with age,
and manifests lower lipid storage capacity. Brown adipocytes engage in higher levels of fatty acid
oxidation and thermogenesis via expression of mitochondrial UCPs. White adipose tissue derives from
mesodermal stem cells that migrate to sites of canonical depots in humans in early embryonic
development and proliferate to form defined depots in late fetal and early neonatal periods. White
adipose tissue depots include visceral and subcutaneous, which may be further subdivided into omental,
retroperitoneal, and mesenteric visceral adipose tissue (VAT) compartments, and deep and superficial
subcutaneous adipose tissue compartments, each with distinct functional characteristics. Brown adipose
tissue develops in rodents during gestation from precursor cells that also give rise to myocytes and form
defined brown adipose tissue depots prior to birth. Brown adipose tissue in humans is less well
understood; while most voluminous in the neonatal period, positron emission tomography scanning
demonstrates cervical, supraclavicular, mediastinal, paraspinous, and perirenal brown adipose tissue
depots in adult humans as well.20
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Figure 4-6. Nutrient excess and cell stress in adipocytes. Nutrient excess is an early signal that induces ER stress and hypertrophy in
adipocytes. ER stress is tightly linked to oxidative stress and inflammation, and each of these processes induces and potentiates the
others. As hypertrophy progresses, adipocyte diameter expands beyond the diffusion distance of oxygen, leading to cellular
hypoxia, which exacerbates cell stress responses, leading to adipocyte apoptosis and necrosis via the unfolded protein response and
other advanced cell stress responses. Adipocyte apoptosis and necrosis trigger recruitment of an advanced inflammatory response
designed to scavenge dead and dying adipocytes. This inflammatory response is associated with fibrotic tissue remodeling which
limits adipocyte hypertrophic and lipid buffering capacity of surviving adipocytes, leading to overflow of lipids, nutrients,
metabolites, and inflammatory products from adipose tissue into the systemic circulation.
Recent data suggest that the dichotomy between white adipose tissue and brown adipose tissue is
overly simplistic, and that adipocyte phenotype spans a spectrum. An intermediate phenotype, termed
“brite” (brown-in-white) or “beige adipocytes,” is found in white adipose tissue depots in rodents and
humans. These cells manifest brown adipocyte functions, and are induced to proliferate by cold stress
and β-adrenergic stimuli, suggesting phenotypic plasticity. An important area of research is directed
toward understanding the mechanisms that regulate adipocyte phenotype. The recently described
protein irisin is secreted by skeletal muscle in response to exercise, induces a brown phenotype in
adipocytes and improves systemic metabolism when overexpressed in mice.21 This finding underscores
the importance of interorgan communication in controlling adipose tissue biology and suggests the
potential for pharmacologic mediators to manipulate adipocyte phenotype with beneficial effects on
systemic metabolism, the so-called “browning” of adipose tissue.
Human adipose tissue accumulation is anatomically heterogeneous. Human obesity may be broadly
classified into android and gynecoid phenotypes, defined by excess VAT and subcutaneous adipose
tissue, respectively. Excess VAT is strongly associated with metabolic disease; excess subcutaneous
adipose tissue, in contrast, is less strongly associated with metabolic disease, and in some studies has
been shown to be protective, suggesting a greater lipid buffering capacity. Surgical lipectomy of VAT
but not subcutaneous adipose tissue ameliorates murine diabetes.22 In contrast to mice, similar studies
of visceral omentectomy in humans demonstrate conflicting results, likely due to more complex human
adipose tissue depot anatomy, but excess VAT as measured by waist circumference and imaging
techniques nonetheless correlates strongly with metabolic disease. The reasons for the disproportionate
effect of VAT on metabolic disease are unclear. While the abdominal location of VAT plays a role,
intrinsic differences between visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissues also exist, evidenced by
experiments in which transplantation of subcutaneous adipose tissue into a visceral location ameliorates
metabolic disease in mice.23 VAT manifests higher levels of inflammation, lipolysis, β-adrenergic
receptor expression, steroid sensitivity, insulin resistance, and adipocyte proliferation and
differentiation relative to subcutaneous adipose tissue.
SYSTEMIC METABOLIC DISEASE
Mediators of systemic metabolic disease: In addition to its distinct functional phenotype, VAT also
contributes to metabolic disease via its direct anatomic communication with the liver via the portal
venous system. Portal overflow of free fatty acids, excess nutrients and metabolites, and hormones and
cytokines from VAT to the liver is an early step in the progression to systemic metabolic disease. As it
progresses, peripheral overflow extends beyond the liver to involve all tissues. Adipose tissue overflow
affects not only skeletal muscle, vasculature, kidneys, and lungs, but also the CNS; inflammation and ER
stress have been documented in the hypothalamus in obesity, and mediate reciprocal effects on adipose
tissue and other organ systems via aberrations in CNS efferent outputs that exacerbate obesity and
metabolic disease. In essence, adipose tissue dysfunction “metastasizes” as its buffering capacity is
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