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Microbiota depletion promotes browning of white adipose tissue and reduces obesity. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Brown adipose tissue (BAT) supports a healthy body by enhancing insulin sensitivity and promoting a lean phenotype, particularly through a process called "browning" where white fat cells turn into beige fat cells in response to cold or exercise.
  • Research demonstrates that removing microbiota via antibiotics or in germ-free mice stimulates the formation of functional beige fat in specific fat areas, leading to better glucose tolerance and reduced fat cell size in various mouse models.
  • The metabolic benefits observed are linked to immune responses, specifically eosinophil activity and type 2 cytokine signaling, which can be disrupted if cytokine signaling is suppressed but restored by introducing microbes back into these treated mice.

Article Abstract

Brown adipose tissue (BAT) promotes a lean and healthy phenotype and improves insulin sensitivity. In response to cold or exercise, brown fat cells also emerge in the white adipose tissue (WAT; also known as beige cells), a process known as browning. Here we show that the development of functional beige fat in the inguinal subcutaneous adipose tissue (ingSAT) and perigonadal visceral adipose tissue (pgVAT) is promoted by the depletion of microbiota either by means of antibiotic treatment or in germ-free mice. This leads to improved glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity and decreased white fat and adipocyte size in lean mice, obese leptin-deficient (ob/ob) mice and high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice. Such metabolic improvements are mediated by eosinophil infiltration, enhanced type 2 cytokine signaling and M2 macrophage polarization in the subcutaneous white fat depots of microbiota-depleted animals. The metabolic phenotype and the browning of the subcutaneous fat are impaired by the suppression of type 2 cytokine signaling, and they are reversed by recolonization of the antibiotic-treated or germ-free mice with microbes. These results provide insight into the microbiota-fat signaling axis and beige-fat development in health and metabolic disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4675088PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nm.3994DOI Listing

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