Abstract

Obesity and its comorbidities like diabetes, hypertension and other cardiovascular disorders are the leading causes of death and disability worldwide. Metabolic diseases cause vascular dysfunction and loss of capillaries termed capillary rarefaction. Interestingly, obesity seems to affect capillary beds in an organ-specific manner, causing morphological and functional changes in some tissues but not in others. Accordingly, treatment strategies targeting capillary rarefaction result in distinct outcomes depending on the organ. In recent years, organ-specific vasculature and endothelial heterogeneity have been in the spotlight in the field of vascular biology since specialized vascular systems have been shown to contribute to organ function by secreting varying autocrine and paracrine factors and by providing niches for stem cells. This review summarizes the recent literature covering studies on organ-specific capillary rarefaction observed in obesity and metabolic diseases and explores the underlying mechanisms, with multiple modes of action proposed. It also provides a glimpse of the reported therapeutic perspectives targeting capillary rarefaction. Further studies should address the reasons for such organ-specificity of capillary rarefaction, investigate strategies for its prevention and reversibility and examine potential signaling pathways that can be exploited to target it.

Highlights

  • The capillary network’s main function is to enable proper tissue metabolism by delivering oxygen and nutrients from the blood into tissues and removing carbon dioxide and waste products from the tissues into circulation

  • Asterholm et al describe that inflammation in Adipose Tissue (AT) is essential for its healthy expansion and even if the inflammatory mediators, such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α inhibit adipogenic differentiation in vitro, they are required for extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling and angiogenesis in vivo [91]

  • The results reported in studies investigating obesity-induced capillary rarefaction suggest that obesity causes diverse and tissue-specific effects on capillary networks depending on the organ studied

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Summary

Introduction

The capillary network’s main function is to enable proper tissue metabolism by delivering oxygen and nutrients from the blood into tissues and removing carbon dioxide and waste products from the tissues into circulation. Capillaries can have other, specialized functions in tissues that further recondition the blood by, for example, storing and recycling fat (adipose tissue (AT) capillaries) or by clearing waste products and mediating blood composition (renal capillaries). Obesity and its associated metabolic diseases are linked to vascular dysfunction and loss of capillaries termed as “capillary rarefaction”. Due to the tissue-specific features and functions of different capillary networks, obesity-induced capillary rarefaction may contribute to different systemic consequences depending on the affected tissue. We have a specific focus on obesity studies in human subjects and animal models but we mention results from obesity-associated diseases and conditions, including diabetes and hypertension

Obesity-Induced Capillary Rarefaction in Different Tissues
Skeletal Muscle
Kidneys
Pancreas
Factors Regulating Capillary Density in Obesity
Regulation
Inflammatory Mediators
Soluble Factors
Adhesion Molecules
Apelin
Other Factors
MAP4K4
Discussion
Full Text
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