High fat diet-induced adrenergic dysfunction and resolution of adipose inflammation

NIH RePORTER · NIH · F31 · $33,636 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Excess nutrient consumption promotes systemic and tissue-specific inflammatory responses, inhibiting insulin receptor signaling pathways and prevents glucose uptake. Although specific molecular and cellular mechanisms that lead to the development of insulin resistance remain unclear, chronic inflammation is central to obesity- induced T2D. Diet-induced adipose tissue (AT) expansion with infiltration of classically activated macrophages and production of pro-inflammatory cytokines perpetuates chronic inflammation and insulin resistance. Therapeutic approaches that directly interrupt innate immune responses are problematic however as they could lead to immunosuppression and thus have limited therapeutic applicability. We have shown that persistent inflammation in diabetes and obesity is due to a deficiency in the processes that normally resolve inflammation. Nonetheless, mechanisms by which obesity induces perturbations in pro-resolving pathways and promote the development of unmitigated chronic inflammation remains undefined. Physical inactivity contributes to increased adiposity, markers of inflammation, chronic disease, and premature death, while physical activity protects against the development of obesity and chronic inflammation independent of reductions in weight. Cellular mechanisms by which physical activity protects against chronic inflammation, however, remain largely unknown. Recent work has shown that resolution of inflammation is mediated in part by enzymatic (15-,12-, 5-lipoxygenase, and cyclooxygenases) conversion of polyunsaturated fatty acids into specialized proresolving lipid mediators (SPMs; e.g., resolvins, lipoxins, maresins, and protectins) that act to quell inflammatory signaling. Importantly, our lab and others have also shown that obese-diabetic mice treated with SPMs display elevated alternatively activated macrophages with reduced AT inflammation, improved insulin sensitivity, and enhanced wound healing capacity. Additionally, our lab has shown that high fat diet-induced insulin resistance develops due to elevated pro- inflammatory lipid mediator leukotriene B4 (LTB4) production and that BLT-1 (LTB4 receptor) deficient mice are protected against diet-induced insulin resistance— a paradigm that also persists in atherosclerotic lesions. These findings suggest that imbalanced production of pro-inflammatory and proresolving lipid mediators contribute to obesity-induced insulin resistance. Our preliminary data show that exercise increases AT SPM biosynthesis and is inhibited by short duration high fat diet (HFD) feeding. We also find that HFD inhibits exercise-induced alternatively activated adipose tissue macrophages (ATM) levels. Interestingly, adrenal gland expression of biosynthetic enzymes and catecholamine levels—which our lab has previously shown to stimulate SPM biosynthesis in macrophages—are reduced following HFD feeding. Thus, we hypothesize that HFD-induced adrenergic dysfunction inhibits the proresolving respons...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10465311
Project number
1F31DK131920-01A1
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE
Principal Investigator
Ernesto Hector Pena Calderin
Activity code
F31
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$33,636
Award type
1
Project period
2022-04-01 → 2024-08-31