학술논문

Acute activation of adipocyte lipolysis reveals dynamic lipid remodeling of the hepatic lipidome
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Lipid Research. 65(2)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Digestive Diseases
Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis
Prevention
Obesity
Nutrition
Liver Disease
Metabolic and endocrine
Affordable and Clean Energy
Mice
Animals
Lipolysis
Fatty Acids
Nonesterified
Lipidomics
Adipocytes
Adipose Tissue
Liver
Triglycerides
Adipose tissue triglyceride lipase
Lipase
Lipids
Ceramides
Lipid droplets
Fasting
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medical biochemistry and metabolomics
Language
Abstract
Adipose tissue is the site of long-term energy storage. During the fasting state, exercise, and cold exposure, the white adipose tissue mobilizes energy for peripheral tissues through lipolysis. The mobilization of lipids from white adipose tissue to the liver can lead to excess triglyceride accumulation and fatty liver disease. Although the white adipose tissue is known to release free fatty acids, a comprehensive analysis of lipids mobilized from white adipocytes in vivo has not been completed. In these studies, we provide a comprehensive quantitative analysis of the adipocyte-secreted lipidome and show that there is interorgan crosstalk with liver. Our analysis identifies multiple lipid classes released by adipocytes in response to activation of lipolysis. Time-dependent analysis of the serum lipidome showed that free fatty acids increase within 30 min of β3-adrenergic receptor activation and subsequently decrease, followed by a rise in serum triglycerides, liver triglycerides, and several ceramide species. The triglyceride composition of liver is enriched for linoleic acid despite higher concentrations of palmitate in the blood. To further validate that these findings were a specific consequence of lipolysis, we generated mice with conditional deletion of adipose tissue triglyceride lipase exclusively in adipocytes. This loss of in vivo adipocyte lipolysis prevented the rise in serum free fatty acids and hepatic triglycerides. Furthermore, conditioned media from adipocytes promotes lipid remodeling in hepatocytes with concomitant changes in genes/pathways mediating lipid utilization. Together, these data highlight critical role of adipocyte lipolysis in interorgan crosstalk between adipocytes and liver.