AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how adiponectin release is regulated in healthy versus metabolically diseased states, using specialized lab techniques to measure secretion.
  • Epinephrine and β-adrenergic receptor activation effectively increased adiponectin release in normal cells but not in those from obese or type 2 diabetic mice, indicating a dysfunction in this process.
  • The research suggests that lower expression of β-adrenergic receptors and Epac1 in obese cells contributes to a condition termed "catecholamine resistance," impairing proper adiponectin secretion.

Article Abstract

We investigated the physiological regulation of adiponectin exocytosis in health and metabolic disease by a combination of membrane capacitance patch-clamp recordings and biochemical measurements of short-term (30-min incubations) adiponectin secretion. Epinephrine or the β-adrenergic receptor (AR) agonist CL 316,243 (CL) stimulated adiponectin exocytosis/secretion in cultured 3T3-L1 and in primary subcutaneous mouse adipocytes, and the stimulation was inhibited by the Epac (Exchange Protein directly Activated by cAMP) antagonist ESI-09. The βAR was highly expressed in cultured and primary adipocytes, whereas other ARs were detected at lower levels. 3T3-L1 and primary adipocytes expressed Epac1, whereas Epac2 was undetectable. Adiponectin secretion could not be stimulated by epinephrine or CL in adipocytes isolated from obese/type 2 diabetic mice, whereas the basal (unstimulated) adiponectin release level was elevated twofold. Gene expression of βAR and Epac1 was reduced in adipocytes from obese animals, and corresponded to a respective ∼35% and ∼30% reduction at the protein level. Small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of βAR (∼60%) and Epac1 (∼50%) was associated with abrogated catecholamine-stimulated adiponectin secretion. We propose that adiponectin exocytosis is stimulated via adrenergic signaling pathways mainly involving βARs. We further suggest that adrenergically stimulated adiponectin secretion is disturbed in obesity/type 2 diabetes as a result of the reduced expression of βARs and Epac1 in a state we define as "catecholamine resistance."

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db15-1597DOI Listing

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