Abstract

Adiponectin is a well described anti-inflammatory adipokine that is highly abundant in serum. Previous reports have found that adiponectin deficiency promotes cardiovascular and metabolic dysfunction in murine models, whereas its overexpression is protective. Two candidate adiponectin receptors, AdipoR1 and AdipoR2, are uncharacterized with regard to cardiovascular tissue homeostasis, and their in vivo metabolic functions remain controversial. Here we subjected AdipoR1- and AdipoR2-deficient mice to chronic hind limb ischemic surgery. Blood flow recovery in AdipoR1-deficient mice was similar to wild-type; however, revascularization in AdipoR2-deficient mice was severely attenuated. Treatment with adiponectin enhanced the recovery of wild-type mice but failed to rescue the impairment observed in AdipoR2-deficient mice. In view of this divergent receptor function in the hind limb ischemia model, AdipoR1- and AdipoR2-deficient mice were also evaluated in a model of diet-induced obesity. Strikingly, AdipoR1-deficient mice developed severe metabolic dysfunction compared with wild type, whereas AdipoR2-deficient mice were protected from diet-induced weight gain and metabolic perturbations. These data show that AdipoR2, but not AdipoR1, is functionally important in an in vivo model of ischemia-induced revascularization and that its expression is essential for the revascularization actions of adiponectin. These data also show that, in contrast to revascularization responses, AdipoR1, but not AdipoR2 deficiency, leads to diet-induced metabolic dysfunction, revealing that these receptors have highly divergent roles in vascular and metabolic homeostasis.

Highlights

  • Adiponectin has vascular and metabolic protective actions; its in vivo receptor-mediated signaling pathways are incompletely understood

  • Differential Effects of Adiponectin receptor 1 (AdipoR1) and AdipoR2 Deficiency on Limb Reperfusion—It has been previously reported that adiponectin-deficient mice display impaired revascularization in a model of chronic hind limb ischemia (17, 29 –31)

  • AdipoR2 Is Necessary for the Revascularization Actions of Adiponectin—We previously reported that hydrodynamic delivery of adiponectin plasmid rescued the impairment in blood flow recovery observed in adiponectin-deficient mice subjected to hind limb ischemia [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Adiponectin has vascular and metabolic protective actions; its in vivo receptor-mediated signaling pathways are incompletely understood. Treatment with adiponectin enhanced the recovery of wild-type mice but failed to rescue the impairment observed in AdipoR2-deficient mice In view of this divergent receptor function in the hind limb ischemia model, AdipoR1and AdipoR2-deficient mice were evaluated in a model of diet-induced obesity. AdipoR1-deficient mice developed severe metabolic dysfunction compared with wild type, whereas AdipoR2-deficient mice were protected from diet-induced weight gain and metabolic perturbations These data show that AdipoR2, but not AdipoR1, is functionally important in an in vivo model of ischemia-induced revascularization and that its expression is essential for the revascularization actions of adiponectin. These data show that, in contrast to revascularization responses, AdipoR1, but not AdipoR2 deficiency, leads to diet-induced metabolic dysfunction, revealing that these receptors have highly divergent roles in vascular and metabolic homeostasis

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