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TGF-β2 is an exercise-induced adipokine that regulates glucose and fatty acid metabolism.

Citation
Takahashi, H., et al. “Tgf-Β2 Is An Exercise-Induced Adipokine That Regulates Glucose And Fatty Acid Metabolism.”. Nature Metabolism, pp. 291-303.
Center Joslin Diabetes Center
Author Hirokazu Takahashi, Christiano R R Alves, Kristin I Stanford, Roeland J W Middelbeek, Pasquale Nigro, Rebecca E Ryan, Ruidan Xue, Masaji Sakaguchi, Matthew D Lynes, Kawai So, Joram D Mul, Min-Young Lee, Estelle Balan, Hui Pan, Jonathan M Dreyfuss, Michael F Hirshman, Mohamad Azhar, Jarna C Hannukainen, Pirjo Nuutila, Kari K Kalliokoski, Søren Nielsen, Bente K Pedersen, Ronald Kahn, Yu-Hua Tseng, Laurie J Goodyear
Abstract

Exercise improves health and well-being across diverse organ systems, and elucidating mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects of exercise can lead to new therapies. Here, we show that transforming growth factor-β2 (TGF-β2) is secreted from adipose tissue in response to exercise and improves glucose tolerance in mice. We identify TGF-β2 as an exercise-induced adipokine in a gene expression analysis of human subcutaneous adipose tissue biopsies after exercise training. In mice, exercise training increases TGF-β2 in scWAT, serum, and its secretion from fat explants. Transplanting scWAT from exercise-trained wild type mice, but not from adipose tissue-specific Tgfb2-/- mice, into sedentary mice improves glucose tolerance. TGF-β2 treatment reverses the detrimental metabolic effects of high fat feeding in mice. Lactate, a metabolite released from muscle during exercise, stimulates TGF-β2 expression in human adipocytes. Administration of the lactate-lowering agent dichloroacetate during exercise training in mice decreases circulating TGF-β2 levels and reduces exercise-stimulated improvements in glucose tolerance. Thus, exercise training improves systemic metabolism through inter-organ communication with fat via a lactate-TGF-β2-signaling cycle.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Nature metabolism
Volume
1
Issue
2
Number of Pages
291-303
Date Published
02/2019
ISSN Number
2522-5812
DOI
10.1038/s42255-018-0030-7
Alternate Journal
Nat Metab
PMID
31032475
PMCID
PMC6481955
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