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Metabolically Activated Adipose Tissue Macrophages Perform Detrimental and Beneficial Functions during Diet-Induced Obesity.

Citation
Coats, B. R., et al. “Metabolically Activated Adipose Tissue Macrophages Perform Detrimental And Beneficial Functions During Diet-Induced Obesity.”. Cell Reports, pp. 3149-3161.
Center University of Chicago
Author Brittney R Coats, Kelly Q Schoenfelt, Valéria C Barbosa-Lorenzi, Eduard Peris, Chang Cui, Alexandria Hoffman, Guolin Zhou, Sully Fernandez, Lijie Zhai, Ben A Hall, Abigail S Haka, Ajay M Shah, Catherine A Reardon, Matthew J Brady, Christopher J Rhodes, Frederick R Maxfield, Lev Becker
Keywords adipocyte, inflammation, Insulin resistance, Macrophage, metabolic activation, obesity
Abstract

During obesity, adipose tissue macrophages (ATMs) adopt a metabolically activated (MMe) phenotype. However, the functions of MMe macrophages are poorly understood. Here, we combine proteomic and functional methods to demonstrate that, in addition to potentiating inflammation, MMe macrophages promote dead adipocyte clearance through lysosomal exocytosis. We identify NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2) as a driver of the inflammatory and adipocyte-clearing properties of MMe macrophages and show that, compared to wild-type, Nox2 mice exhibit a time-dependent metabolic phenotype during diet-induced obesity. After 8 weeks of high-fat feeding, Nox2 mice exhibit attenuated ATM inflammation and mildly improved glucose tolerance. After 16 weeks of high-fat feeding, Nox2 mice develop severe insulin resistance, hepatosteatosis, and visceral lipoatrophy characterized by dead adipocyte accumulation and defective ATM lysosomal exocytosis, a phenotype reproduced in myeloid cell-specific Nox2 mice. Collectively, our findings suggest that MMe macrophages perform detrimental and beneficial functions whose contribution to metabolic phenotypes during obesity is determined by disease progression.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Cell reports
Volume
20
Issue
13
Number of Pages
3149-3161
Date Published
09/2017
ISSN Number
2211-1247
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2017.08.096
Alternate Journal
Cell Rep
PMID
28954231
PMCID
PMC5646237
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