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Sex differences in microglial CX3CR1 signalling determine obesity susceptibility in mice.
Citation | “Sex Differences In Microglial Cx3Cr1 Signalling Determine Obesity Susceptibility In Mice.”. Nature Communications, p. 14556. . |
Center | University of Washington |
Author | Mauricio D Dorfman, Jordan E Krull, John D Douglass, Rachael Fasnacht, Fernando Lara-Lince, Thomas H Meek, Xiaogang Shi, Vincent Damian, Hong T Nguyen, Miles E Matsen, Gregory J Morton, Joshua P Thaler |
Abstract |
Female mice are less susceptible to the negative metabolic consequences of high-fat diet feeding than male mice, for reasons that are incompletely understood. Here we identify sex-specific differences in hypothalamic microglial activation via the CX3CL1-CX3CR1 pathway that mediate the resistance of female mice to diet-induced obesity. Female mice fed a high-fat diet maintain CX3CL1-CX3CR1 levels while male mice show reductions in both ligand and receptor expression. Female Cx3cr1 knockout mice develop 'male-like' hypothalamic microglial accumulation and activation, accompanied by a marked increase in their susceptibility to diet-induced obesity. Conversely, increasing brain CX3CL1 levels in male mice through central pharmacological administration or virally mediated hypothalamic overexpression converts them to a 'female-like' metabolic phenotype with reduced microglial activation and body-weight gain. These data implicate sex differences in microglial activation in the modulation of energy homeostasis and identify CX3CR1 signalling as a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of obesity. |
Year of Publication |
2017
|
Journal |
Nature communications
|
Volume |
8
|
Number of Pages |
14556
|
Date Published |
12/2017
|
ISSN Number |
2041-1723
|
DOI |
10.1038/ncomms14556
|
Alternate Journal |
Nat Commun
|
PMID |
28223698
|
PMCID |
PMC5322503
|
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