Abstract

Adipose tissue (AT) is no longer considered to be responsible for energy storage only but is now recognized as a major endocrine organ that is distributed across different parts of the body and is actively involved in regulatory processes controlling energy homeostasis. Moreover, AT plays a crucial role in the development of metabolic disease such as diabetes. Recent evidence has shown that adipokines have the ability to regulate blood glucose levels and improve metabolic homeostasis. While AT has been studied extensively in the context of type 2 diabetes, less is known about how different AT types are affected by absolute insulin deficiency in type 1 or permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus. Here, we analyzed visceral and subcutaneous AT in a diabetic, insulin-deficient pig model (MIDY) and wild-type (WT) littermate controls by RNA sequencing and quantitative proteomics. Multi-omics analysis indicates a depot-specific dysregulation of crucial metabolic pathways in MIDY AT samples. We identified key proteins involved in glucose uptake and downstream signaling, lipogenesis, lipolysis and β-oxidation to be differentially regulated between visceral and subcutaneous AT in response to insulin deficiency. Proteins related to glycogenolysis, pyruvate metabolism, TCA cycle and lipogenesis were increased in subcutaneous AT, whereas β-oxidation-related proteins were increased in visceral AT from MIDY pigs, pointing at a regionally different metabolic adaptation to master energy stress arising from diminished glucose utilization in MIDY AT. Chronic, absolute insulin deficiency and hyperglycemia revealed fat depot-specific signatures using multi-omics analysis. The generated datasets are a valuable resource for further comparative and translational studies in clinical diabetes research.

Highlights

  • Adipose tissue is a major player in whole body energy homeostasis and regulation of metabolic functions

  • We identified a total of 23,730 peptides from 2,851 proteins with high confidence (FDR < 0.01)

  • Adipose tissue plays a central role in energy homeostasis and metabolic function [reviewed in [2, 53]], and its development and functions are regulated by insulin signaling [54]

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Summary

Introduction

Adipose tissue is a major player in whole body energy homeostasis and regulation of metabolic functions. It serves as storage of surplus energy in the form of triglycerides in adipocytes and controls lipid mobilization during fasting by releasing free fatty acids [1, 2]. It is thought that visceral adipose tissue is more likely to contribute to the pathogenesis of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus [13, 14], while accumulation of subcutaneous fat has even been reported to reduce metabolic disease risk [15,16,17]

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