Abstract

Depending on its anatomical placement, perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) has been found to possess features more (e.g., aortic thoracic) or less (e.g., aortic abdominal) similar to brown/beige adipose tissue in mice, whereas PVAT surrounding the mesenteric arteries and the caudal part of abdominal aorta is similar to white fat. PVAT is thought to influence vascular function through the effects of adipose-secreted molecules on vessels. Brown adipose tissue was recently shown to play differential secretory role via secretion of the so-called batokines but the involvement of differential batokine production in PVAT brown/beige plasticity was unclear. The current study characterizes for the first time the expression of batokines at aortic thoracic PVAT (tPVAT) and aortic abdominal PVAT (aPVAT) in comparison with typical brown and white adipose depots, in basal and thermogenically activated conditions. We found that both PVAT depots increased their expression of genes encoding the batokines bone morphogenetic protein-8b (BMP8B), fibroblast growth factor-21 (FGF21), and kininogen-2 (KNG2) in response to cold, indicating that, under cold-induced thermogenic activation, both thoracic aorta and abdominal aorta would experience intense local exposure to these PVAT-secreted batokines. In contrast, the gene expression levels of growth/differentiation factor-15 and vascular endothelial growth factor-A were induced only in tPVAT. Under short-term high-fat diet-induced thermogenic activation, the thoracic aorta would be specifically exposed to a local increase in PVAT-originating BMP8B, FGF21, and KNG2. Our data support the notion that acquisition of a brown/beige phenotype in PVAT is associated with upregulation of batokines, mainly BMP8B, FGF21, and KNG2, that can differentially target the vascular system.

Highlights

  • Two types of adipose tissues have been traditionally distinguished in mammals: white adipose tissues (WAT) and brown adipose tissues (BAT)

  • In which mice were maintained at 21°C and fed a standard diet, the microscopic morphology of thoracic PVAT (tPVAT) closely resembled that of BAT, with numerous multilocular adipocytes

  • We found that tPVAT responded to cold-induced thermogenesis by eliciting a pattern of thermogenesis-related gene expression similar to that observed in BAT, whereas activated BAT (tPVAT) and beige (aPVAT) resembled inguinal WAT (iWAT) in that it showed a strong capacity for browning in response to cold stimulus

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Summary

Introduction

Two types of adipose tissues have been traditionally distinguished in mammals: white adipose tissues (WAT) and brown adipose tissues (BAT). WAT is largely present at subcutaneous and visceral sites in experimental rodent models as well as in humans. A remarkable white-to-brown plasticity has been recognized under circumstances of enhanced thermogenic stimulus (e.g., a cold environment): Anatomical sites typically containing WAT (mostly subcutaneous) may become enriched in brown adipocyte-like cells that are termed “beige” adipocytes. These beige adipocytes are thermogenic and contain UCP1, but they are derived from a different cell lineage than the “classical” brown adipocytes present at anatomically defined BAT depots (Giralt and Villarroya, 2013; Chouchani and Kajimura, 2019). Whereas hypertrophied WAT, as in obesity, is associated with multiple diseases ranging from type II diabetes and cardiovascular disease to cancer, high BAT activity is positively correlated with cardio-metabolic health (Becher et al, 2021)

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