Abstract
The proposition that white adipose tissue is involved in the inflammatory response and metabolic dysregulation of endotoxaemia has been examined. Mice were injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 25 mg/kg) and epididymal, perirenal and subcutaneous adipose tissue removed 4 or 24 h later. The expression of genes encoding key inflammation-related adipokines was measured by real-time polymerase chain reaction. At 24 h after the administration of LPS, there was no change in leptin mRNA level, and adiponectin mRNA fell. However, major increases in TNFalpha, MCP-1 (up to 40-fold) and IL-6 (up to 250-fold) mRNA levels were evident; a substantial elevation in these mRNAs occurred by 4 h, and adipose tissue IL-6 protein also increased (three- to eightfold). At 24 h, the responses in the subcutaneous depot were much lower than in epididymal and perirenal adipose tissue, but at 4 h, the subcutaneous tissue showed major increases in IL-6, MCP-1 and TNFalpha gene expression. In contrast to the inflammatory adipokines, the mRNA level of two macrophage markers, F4/80 and MAC-1, was unaltered in adipose tissue during endotoxaemia. Expression of the hypoxia-sensitive transcription factor, HIF-1alpha, gene was increased at both 4 and 24 h, and HIF-1alpha protein was elevated at 4 h, suggesting that the tissue was hypoxic. It is concluded that white adipose tissue may play an important role in the production of inflammatory mediators in endotoxaemia.
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